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Ophelia
Ophelia
Ophelia

Ophelia

Maker (American, active in England, 1844 - 1930)
Date1880
MediumOil on board
DimensionsSight: 23 1/2 x 17 1/4 in. (59.7 x 43.8 cm)
Framed: 30-3/4 x 24-1/2 x 3-1/2 in. (78.1 x 62.2 x 8.9 cm)
Credit LineBequest of Robert Coale
Object number2007.134
Object TypePaintings
On View
Not on view

In her second attempt to capture Ellen Terry in the role of Ophelia, Anna Lea Merritt "wished to make a painting of an Ophelia really mad." In order to perfect the expression, Merritt collected observations at "Bedlam" Hospital, the first asylum for the mentally ill in England. The resulting painting intriguingly blends fiction and reality in its composite of a Shakespearean character, a famous actress (especially identifiable by her red hair), and a "really mad" woman.

From Merritt’s memoirs:

Among [the patients] moved a lovely-looking young woman, picking up odds and ends as she slowly walked. Then she dropped on her knees, continuing to move, kneeling and grasping against her breast the bundle she had gathered—faded flowers, torn bits of paper, dead leaves, a reel of cotton! Just in front of us she stopped, looking full in my eyes with an expression questioning, doubtful, full of pain. . . . Something of her expression I got into my picture.

Ophelia
Anna Lea Merritt
1880
Miss Ellen Terry as Ophelia
Anna Lea Merritt
1879
Myra Reynolds
William Merritt Chase
circa 1898
Portrait of a Man
William Merritt Chase
circa 1875
Diana
Anna Vaughn Hyatt Huntington
1950
(Series of six photographs)
Mary Ann Lea Dorr
n.d.
My Brother's Keeper
Merritt Mauzey
1943
Homage to Rimbaud or Ophelia (Hommage à Rimbud ou Ophelia)
Walter Peterhans
circa 1928 - 1929 (negative, this impression 1963 - 1964)
Painting of a House
H. C. (Horace Clifford) Westermann
1930s