John Everett Millais
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United Kingdom (1829 - 1896 ) - Artworks Wikipedia® - John Everett Millais

Christie's /Nov 1, 2012
€7,753.14 - €11,629.71
€7,707.00
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Artworks in Arcadja
173Some works of John Everett Millais
Extracted between 173 works in the catalog of ArcadjaJohn Everett Millais - Dropped From The Nest
Original
Auction:
Christie's -May 2, 2013
- London
Lot number:
213
Other WORKS AT AUCTION
Description:
Sir John Everett Millais, Bt., P.R.A. (1829-1896)
Dropped from the Nest
signed with monogram and dated '18/83' (lower left)
oil on canvas
41 x 27½ in. (104.1 x 69.8 cm.)
Bought from the artist, with copyright, by the Fine Art Society, London.
Sir William Cuthbert Quilter by 1884 and at least until 1886.
Ralph Brocklebank; his sale, Christie's, London, 29 April 1893, lot 115 (unsold, 1,200 gns).
Mrs Ernest Hills by 1898.
F.E. Hills; his sale, Knight, Frank & Rutley, 27 June 1929, lot 20.
The Trustees of the late Sir Thomas Jaffrey; Christie's, London, 14 July 1972, lot 60 (6500 gns to Robert Mossman).
Robert B. Mossman; Christie's, London, 13 October 1978, lot 72, where purchased by the present vendor.
Magazine of Art, June 1883, p. xxxiii.
Marion Spielmann, Millais and his Works, 1898, p. 178, no. 250.
J. G. Millais, The Life and Letters of Sir John Everett Millais, 1899, vol. II, pp. 481 and 495.
Frank Davis, 'The Wayward Goddess of Fortune', Country Life, vol. 164, no. 4248, (December 7, 1978), p. 1958 (illustrated).
Elaine Shefer, 'The "Bird in the Cage" in the History of Sexuality: Sir John Everett Millais and William Holman Hunt', Journal of the History of Sexuality, vol. 1, no. 3, 1991, p. 446-480 (illustrated).
Fine Art Society, June 1883.
Brighton, 1884, no. 81.
Manchester, 1885, no. 434.
London, Grosvenor Gallery, Millais Exhibition, 1886, no. 104.
London, Royal Academy, Millais, Winter Exhbition, 1898, no. 50.
Goupil & Co., photogravure, 18½ x 12½ in. (47 x 31.8 cm.), published by The Fine Art Society, 1884.
Dropped from the Nest is emblematic of Millais's late style in its masterly brushwork, subtle tonalities, contemporary ideal of female beauty, and evocation of childhood innocence and inner lives. It was first exhibited at the Fine Art Society who then arranged for it to be reproduced for a broader market.
Originally the sitter was Winifred Agneta Yorke Bevan (d. 1959). She was the first daughter of Roland Yorke Bevan (1848-1923) and Agneta Olivia Kinnaird (1850-1940) who had been married on 7 June 1874. Her mother was the fourth daughter of Arthur Fitzgerald, 10th Lord Kinnaird (1814-1887). Winifred Bevan would later marry William Sidney, 5th Baron De L'Isle and Dudley (1859-1945), and their son, William Philip Sidney, would be 1st Viscount De L'Isle and 6th Baron De L'Isle and Dudley, the last British Governor-General of Australia.
In response to a letter from Effie, Winifred's mother Agneta Bevan wrote to Millais on 18 March 1883 from her home at 31 Rutland Gate chagrined that her daughter's face might be painted out of the final picture, and asking if he would "kindly alter the frock & the colour of the sash. That frock gave me an immensity of trouble to get it exactly suitable, & I have set my heart on having her painted in it, & naturally I should not like it to appear to be a copy of a picture just painted & exhibited when it was my own idea. It suits her also so very well that I could not bear to see it in a picture of another child, nor the sash either, because I wish her to be painted in a pink sash it would be very disagreeable to me to see the figure of my child with another head! ... After all the trouble & interest you have taken, I feel very sorry that the result has not pleased you better. I have not told Winnie yet, & my husband is away, so I don't know what they will say!"
Whether or not Millais retained Winifred Bevan's features, he did not appear to have adjusted the pink of the sash nor the white of the frock. And there is no record of her sitting for another of Millais's pictures. Winifred's mother, in her own mind pressed for time, wrote that she would "try to get her photographed at once, & in this frock as I must try & not let all her babyish beauty depart without leaving any trace behind, as I always hoped to have her painted this winter."1
Millais well captured the girl's "babyish beauty," and the bloom of her cheeks that match the light rose of the hair bow and sash - effects far beyond the possibilities of monochromatic photography at this time. The sylvan background with its spray of bent-stemmed native bluebell to the left and right locate the scene in spring, and these plants along with the juvenile mistle thrush in her hands, represent still current ideals of native English species.
There are a number of photographs of the work in progress, the first two showing the sitter with shoulder-length hair, without a bow or apron, and holding an apple instead of the bird.2 The clear symbolism of the fruit and its link to religious themes of original sin were then mitigated by Millais's insertion of the young thrush, collected and displayed as a mark of tender innocence seeking shelter and comfort. This puts this work squarely in the popular revival of the eighteenth-century fancy picture, a field in which Millais had been both progenitor and its most successful practitioner.3 Indeed, Dropped from the Nest resembles similarly posed girls such as young Ruby Streatfield in The Captive of c.1881-2 (Art Gallery of New South Wales) who is simply turned a quarter rotation to the left, and the bow and sash are little changed from those worn by Edie Ramage for the hugely successful Cherry Ripe of 1879 (private collection). Even the broad washes of paint and pitted surface were calculated to resemble such prototypes by Sir Joshua Reynolds, Thomas Gainsborough, and George Romney. But the gaze off to the right, the sensitivity in her expression, and the hapless songbird in her cupped and joined hands gives the picture a sharper focus than its antecedents. As with so many of Millais's finest pictures of this later period of his career, Dropped from the Nest represents an appealing balance between aesthetic beauty and deeper sentiment.
Previous owners include Sir William Cuthbert Quilter, Bt., M.P., who possessed Millais's Joan of Arc (1865), The Rt. Hon. John Bright, M.P. (1880), and Murthly Moss, Perthshire (1887, unlocated). His brother was the notable art critic Harry Quilter, and frequent writer on Millais. It then passed into the hands of Ralph Brocklebank of Childwall Hall near Liverpool who also owned Millais's The Wolf's Den (1862-3, unlocated), and then possibly to Frank Ernest Hills (1851-1896) of Redleaf, Penshurst, Kent, inheritor of the F.C. Hills & Co. Chemical Manufactures fortune, and following to his wife Constance (née Constance Melanie Wynne-Roberts, d. 1932) who would twice be painted by John Singer Sargent. She owned an impressive collection including Gainsborough's Suffolk Landscape (mid-1750s, Kimbell Art Museum), dispersing them at auction three years before her death.
In 1978 the picture sold for a then-record price for a work by the artist.4
1 Unpublished letters to J.E. Millais Found Amongst the 4-Part Collection of Letters from Friends to Effie, Part 3 - 1879/1884, number 3/105, collection of and transcribed by Sir Geoffroy Richard Everett Millais and gratefully used with his permission.
2 Photograph Album in the Millais family, information from Malcolm Warner.
3 See A. Smith, 'Fancy Pictures' in Jason Rosenfeld and Alison Smith, Millais, ex. cat. Tate, London, 2007, pp. 172-173.
4 F. Davis, 'The Wayward Goddess of Fortune', Country Life, vol. 164, no. 4248 (7 December 1978), p. 1958.
We are grateful to Dr Jason Rosenfeld, Marymount Manhattan College, for help with this catalogue entry.
John Everett Millais - Study Of A Male Nude
Original 1850
Auction:
Christie's -Dec 13, 2012
- London
Lot number:
4
Other WORKS AT AUCTION
Description:
Sir John Everett Millais, Bt., P.R.A. (1829-1896) Study of a male nude with added monogram and date and indistinctly inscribed '1847/Life Study RA ...' (lower right) pencil and stump, watermark 'J WHATMAN/TURKEY MILL/1850.', on paper, unframed 30 x 20¾ in. (76.2 x 52.8 cm.)
Dated 1847, the present drawing was executed whilst Millais was a pupil at the Royal Academy Schools, which he had joined in 1840, the youngest ever student. In 1843 he won a medal for his drawings after the Antique.
We are grateful to Malcolm Warner for confirming the attribution on the basis of a photograph.
John Everett Millais - Miss Gertrude Vanderbilt
Original
Auction:
Christie's -Nov 15, 2012
- London
Lot number:
100
Other WORKS AT AUCTION
Description:
Lot Description
Sir John Everett Millais, Bt., P.R.A. (1829-1896) Miss Gertrude Vanderbilt signed with monogram and dated '18/88' (lower left) oil on canvas 94½ x 62 in. (240 x 157.5 cm.)
Special Notice
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 20% on the buyer's premium.
Lot Condition Report
I confirm that I have read this Important Notice and agree to its terms.
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Provenance
Commissioned by the sitter's father, Cornelius Vanderbilt II (1843-1899), for 3000 guineas (£3,150). Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt. Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney. Private collection.
Literature
J.G. Millais, The Life and Letters of Sir John Everett Millais, President of the Royal Academy, London, 1899, II, p. 484.
Exhibited
New York, American Art Galleries, Loan Exhibition of Portraits, 1903, no. 156A.
View Lot Notes ›
John Everett Millais - Charlie Is My Darling
Original -
Auction:
Christie's -Nov 1, 2012
- New York
Lot number:
46
Other WORKS AT AUCTION
Description:
Lot Description
Sir John Everett Millais, Bt., P.R.A. (British, 1829-1896)
Charlie is my Darling
signed with monogram (lower right)
oil on panel
16¾ x 10¼ in. (42.5 x 26 cm.)
Lot Condition Report
I confirm that I have read this Important Notice and agree to its terms.
View Condition Report
Provenance
F. T. Turner; Christie's, 4 May 1878, lot 17. with Thomas Agnew & Sons, London, acquired at the above sale. J. Dyson Perrins, London by 1878. Anonymous sale; Sotheby's, London, 28 July 1965, lot 358. with Norton Galleries, London. with Oscar & Peter Johnson, London. James Reiss. Anonymous sale; Christie's, New York, 22 May 1990, lot 293.
Saleroom Notice
We are grateful to Malcolm Warner for confirming the authenticity of this painting.
Pre-Lot Text
PROPERTY FROM CALUMET FARM, LEXINGTON, KY
Literature
Millais papers. Pierpont Morgan Library, New York. In a letter to his wife dated 16 September 1864, 'I finished the small Charlie beautifully.' The model for this painting was Lady Hannah Palliser (1843-1923).
Exhibited
Sheffield, Mappin Art Gallery, Victorian Paintings, September-November 1968, no. 145.
John Everett Millais - Charlie Is My Darling
Original 1864
Auction:
Christie's -Oct 29, 2012
- New York
Lot number:
46
Other WORKS AT AUCTION
Description:
Sir John Everett Millais, Bt., P.R.A. (British, 1829-1896)
Charlie is my Darling
signed with monogram (lower right)
oil on panel
16¾ x 10¼ in. (42.5 x 26 cm.)
F. T. Turner; Christie's, 4 May 1878, lot 17. with Thomas Agnew & Sons, London, acquired at the above sale. J. Dyson Perrins, London by 1878. Anonymous sale; Sotheby's, London, 28 July 1965, lot 358. with Norton Galleries, London. with Oscar & Peter Johnson, London. James Reiss. Anonymous sale; Christie's, New York, 22 May 1990, lot 293.
PROPERTY FROM CALUMET FARM, LEXINGTON, KY
Millais papers. Pierpont Morgan Library, New York. In a letter to his wife dated 16 September 1864, 'I finished the small Charlie beautifully.' The model for this painting was Lady Hannah Palliser (1843-1923).
Sheffield, Mappin Art Gallery, Victorian Paintings, September-November 1968, no. 145.





