Ophelia, Head Study, 1852 John Everett Millais, From the Pre-Raphaelites.org website: 'Millais asked Elizabeth Siddal to pose for his painting 'Ophelia' (Tate Gallery, London) at the end of 1851, but she was unable to come to his studio until January 1852. There, to simulate the drowning heroine of 'Hamlet', she famously lay in a bath of water, warmed by lamps placed underneath.', Art Movement, Pre-Raphaelite, Drawing, Pencil, Women, Literature, William Shakespeare, Sketch, Female, Literature, Character
Keywords:
Ophelia, Head Study, 1852 John Everett Millais, Pre-Raphaelites.org website, Millais asked Elizabeth Siddal, pose, painting, Ophelia, Tate Gallery, London, 1851, unable, come, studio, January 1852, simulate, drowning heroine, Hamlet, famously lay, bath, water, warmed, lamps placed underneath, Art Movement, Pre-Raphaelite, Drawing, Pencil, Women, Literature, William Shakespeare, Sketch, Female, Literature, Character
Image ID:
The watermark in the image will not appear on the final download.