Love's Messenger
Painting by Marie Spartali Stillman / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Love's Messenger is an 1885 watercolor by Marie Spartali Stillman in which a dove has just carried a love letter to a woman standing in front of an open window. She wears a red rose, and has just put down her embroidery of a blind-folded Cupid.[1][2]
Love's Messenger | |
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Artist | Marie Spartali Stillman |
Year | 1885 |
Type | watercolor basic |
Dimensions | 81.3 cm × 66 cm (32.0 in × 26 in) |
Location | Delaware Art Museum, Wilmongton |
The artist modestly described the painting in 1906:
I wish I could tell you something interesting about my pictures at Mr. Bancroft's [,] they are merely studies of heads done for the pleasure of painting. The effect of a fair head in a certain bull's eye window of a friend's studio where I was working one winter suggested Love's messenger - that is all... [Love's Messenger] is merely a study from a model. My daughter Effie who was then at school [was] not able to sit for me to complete it from her. I painted a landscape from the Villa Borghese Rome as the background when I made several changes in the picture while in Rome.[3]
Critic Jan Marsh suggests that the studio with the bull's eye windows may have been in Edward Burne-Jones's house "The Grange" in Fulham.[2]
The painting, paper mounted on wood, was purchased in 1901 by Samuel Bancroft and is now in the Delaware Art Museum.