The Ransom

Getty Museum

The Ransom

Creator

John Everett Millais

Artist · 1829–1896

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Photographer

From a young age, John Everett Millais showed a prodigious natural talent for drawing, and his parents groomed him to become an artist. By age nine he had already won two awards for his drawing. He entered the Royal Academy at age eleven--the youngest student ever to be admitted. As he matured, Millais began to reject the Academy's conservative teachings, which held the art of the High Renaissance

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Date
1860–1862
Medium
Oil on canvas
Culture
British
Department
Paintings
Institution
Getty Museum

An armored knight, still in his riding boots and accompanied by his page in mud-splattered stockings, seems to have hastily gotten off his horse to meet for this ransom exchange. The knight’s daughters embrace him while he tries to hand over precious jewels, but their arms are still being held by the kidnapper, whose plainer clothing contrasts with their finery. The page in a blue and white striped ensemble is watching closely and reaches into his purse, sensing that the kidnappers will demand more ransom. These characters—not based on any historical or literary source, but invented by the artist—dramatize a narrative through their expressive gestures and glances. The outcome still seems uncertain and even the dog looks expectantly at the central figures for the resolution of the story. British artist John Everett Millais set this imaginary drama in the 1500s and looked to his family, friends, and surroundings to stage the painting. His wife Effie researched and made the period costumes; his friend Mr. Miller posed for the head of the knight; a railway guard named "Strong" was the model for the knight's body; and the two girls were painted from a single model, Helen Petrie. The tapestry in the background was based on a Flemish tapestry in the South Kensington Museum (now the Victoria and Albert Museum) not far from the artist’s home.

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