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Artist Biography
John Henry Fuseli (1741-1825),
English
As painters, we've all, at
one time or another, become involved in a work that turned out to be a
nightmare, either in its execution, or when finished...or both. Whatever
the case, hopefully it was something we could put behind us at the end of
the day and not have plagued us in our sleep as a true nightmare. Of
course dreams and nightmares have been the subject of some painters' work,
principally the Surrealists. However, about a 150 years before Salvador
Dali ever painted the first of his hated bugs, or Rene Magritte ever
logged the first steam engine out of his fireplace, an English artist
probed "his worst nightmare" so to speak, to a degree rivalling anything
ever conjured up by the Surrealists.
John Henry Fuseli was a highly educated Swiss minister, not a painter when
he came to London in 1764 at the age of 23. Recognised as one of the
city's intellectual leaders, he twice went to Italy where he studied the
classics and absorbed the wealth of knowledge the Italian Renaissance had
to offer. Returning to London, he determined to make a career for himself
as a painter, and although heavily influenced by Michelangelo, he seems to
have developed something of a style of his own, illustrating literary
works, Norse myths, Dante, Milton, and Shakespeare. However his most
expressive work seems to have come from his own psyche as in his The
Nightmare, painted in 1781.
In it Fuseli depicts a languidly recumbent female figure clad in a
sleeping gown upon whom sits an ugly, hairy creature known as an incubus,
a folklore demon believed to rape women in their sleep. Entered into the
1780 Royal Academy exhibition, the painting tended to evoke nightmares for
the London critics as well. One wrote that it "...ought to be destroyed",
while Horace Walpole called it "...shockingly mad, mad, mad, madder than
ever." Openly erotic, the painting, nonetheless was repeated in no less
than six different versions. Each of them sold practically before the
paint was dry. Commercial engravers loved it, and apparently so did the
public. Print reproductions of it abounded. A hundred years later, one of
them ended up framed and hanging in the office of Austrian psychoanalyst,
Sigmund Freud.
John Henry Fuseli
Oil Paintings
Reproductions:
Lady Macbeth 50cm x 80cm (20" x 32") $279 Nightmare 60cm x 75cm (24" x 30") $289
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