![]() ![]() ![]() His meticulously painted pictures proved popular amongst the Victorian middle classes and he produced over 400 paintings in his lifetime.įurther reading: Christopher Wood, Olympian Dreamer: Victorian Classical Painters 1860-1914, London 1983Įdwin Becker, ed. He was elected a Royal Academician in 1879 and, three years later, a major exhibition of his work was held at the Grosvenor Gallery. For example the decorative silver jug on the shelf in the background also appears in An Audience at Agrippa’s, A Bath and A Dedication to Bacchus (Barrow, p.173).Īlma-Tadema rose to prominence in the Victorian art world. In addition the same items were often included in different paintings. Alma-Tadema built up an enormous collection of photographs of fragments of classical antiquity and architecture which he consistently referred to when composing his pictures. The rediscovery of Herculaneum in 1738 and Pompeii ten years later had revealed a plethora of artefacts, including wall paintings, statues and mosaics. ![]() ![]() A Silent Greeting is characteristic of many of Alma-Tadema’s paintings from this period which depict an anecdotal scene of Roman life set in an archaeologically reconstructed interior. Both paintings depict a male or female gazing at their loved one. This painting was commissioned by Sir Henry Tate (1819-99) as a companion piece to A Foregone Conclusion (Tate N03513) which he had given to his wife, Amy, as a wedding present in 1885. ![]()
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