Skip to main content
Ophelia
Ophelia
Ophelia

Ophelia

Maker (American, active in England, 1844 - 1930)
Date1880
MediumEtching
DimensionsPlate: 8 7/8 x 6 3/4 in. (22.5 x 17.2 cm)
Framed: 19 x 15 x 1 in. (48.3 x 38.1 x 2.5 cm)
Credit LineBequest of Robert Coale
Object number2007.135
Object TypePrints
On View
Not on view
Merritt made this etched copy of her painting Ophelia for publication in American Art Review in 1880. The tragic heroine from Shakespeare’s Hamlet appears as a dignified, deeply hurt woman who could have easily been one of the painter’s or the viewer’s acquaintances. That she is a character from the play comes to the viewer only as a second thought, perhaps suggested by the wildflowers she holds tight to her dress. Any young woman around us, beholders are invited to realize, could suffer as much as this Ophelia, whose sad, proud, mad gaze calls for attention and compassion.
Miss Ellen Terry as Ophelia
Anna Lea Merritt
1879
Ophelia
Anna Lea Merritt
1880
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.
Myra Reynolds
William Merritt Chase
circa 1898
My Brother's Keeper
Merritt Mauzey
1943
letter
H. C. (Horace Clifford) Westermann
May 11, 1979
Homage to Rimbaud or Ophelia (Hommage à Rimbud ou Ophelia)
Walter Peterhans
circa 1928 - 1929 (negative, this impression 1963 - 1964)