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Tate Britain Exhibition

Millais

26 September 2007 – 13 January 2008
Sir John Everett Millais Detail of Ophelia 1851–2 face

Sir John Everett Millais Detail of Ophelia 1851–2Oil on canvas 762 x 1118 mm

© Tate

The exhibition reveals how Millais made the dramatic shift from his early academic paintings to develop his audacious Pre-Raphaelite works, such as the controversial Isabella, and how he instigated the Pre-Raphaelite movement with Rossetti and Holman Hunt.

Millais was the greatest painter and founding member of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, which burst upon the British artistic scene in the mid-19th century. His magnificent jewel-like paintings have shaped our vision of Victorian womanhood, and cemented impressions of Shakespearian heroines Ophelia and Mariana in our minds. He was an artist engaged with modern developments in art as much as with the old masters, and this is the first major solo survey of his art since the Royal Academy retrospective of 1967, and the first exhibition since 1898 that examines the entirety of his career.

Tate favourites such as Ophelia and Mariana are shown alongside works lent from collections around the world to give a complete picture of the artist. His images of stoic women and sensuous beauties have become some of the most iconic images in art, recreating a magical world of spirituality and veiled eroticism. You will also see how his style developed in later life from mature Pre-Raphaelitism to his nostalgic fancy pictures – an extremely popular style of painting in his day, and discover a less well-known side of Millais, spearheaded by his magnificent late landscapes, which have never been shown as a group before, and his superb society portraits.

The exhibition is curated by Alison Smith, Curator, Tate Britain, and Jason Rosenfeld, Associate Professor at Marymount Manhattan College, New York.

Tate Britain

Millbank
London SW1P 4RG
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Dates

26 September 2007 – 13 January 2008

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  • Pre-Raphaelites Victorian Avant-Garde Banner

    Pre-Raphaelites: Victorian Avant-Garde

    Pre-Raphaelites: Victorian Avant-Garde: Tate Britain exhibition until 13 January 2013 bringing together over 150 works in different media, including painting, sculpture, photography and the applied arts

  • John Everett Millais Lorenzo and Isabella 1848–9

    Sugar, Salt and Curdled Milk: Millais and the Synthetic Subject

    Carol Jacobi

    This article examines the sexual imagery of particular paintings by the Pre-Raphaelite painter John Everett Millais. It argues that criticism has overlooked the sophisticated poetry of the body in Millais’s art, its synthetic approach to gender, and its precocious place in a wider Aesthetic and symbolist visual and literary tradition.

  • Detail from an illustrated letter by Sir John Everett Millais, Bt to the Lemprière family 1843–4

    A family affair

    Edward Platt

    Millais’s early career was closely linked to his friendship with the Lemprière family. The teenage artist’s desire for one of the daughters encouraged him to write a series of illustrated letters, pages of which are shown here for the first time.

  • John Everett Millais's Hearts are Trumps 1872

    Prior to display at Tate Britain, John Millais’s Hearts are Trumps 1872 underwent major painting and frame conservation

  • Major late landscape by Millais, Dew-Drenched Furze, donated to Tate

    Major late landscape by Millais, Dew-Drenched Furze, donated to Tate: Press related to past news.

  • Poetic encounters

    Kathleen Jamie

    Many of Millais’s late landscapes in Scotland were painted en plein air and given titles inspired by his favourite poems. Variously described as melancholic, elegiac or celebratory, they have been an overlooked part of the artist’s output – until now. Tate Etc. invited a contemporary poet to visit the spot where he created Chill October.

  • Pre-Raphaelite Vision: Truth to Nature

    Pre-Raphaelite Vision: Truth to Nature past exhibition at Tate Britain

  • Exposed: The Victorian Nude

    Exposed: The Victorian Nude: past Tate Britain exhibition

  • Sir John Everett Millais Detail of Ophelia 1851–2 face

    MicroTate 3

    Elisabeth Bronfen , Lucinda Hawksley , John Paul Lynch and Callum Innes

    Elisabeth Bronfen, Lucinda Hawksley, John Paul Lynch and Callum Innes reflect on a work in the Tate collection

  • Artist

    Sir John Everett Millais, Bt

    1829–1896
Artwork
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