
Getty Museum
Sir Guyon with the Palmer Attending, Tempted by Phaedria to Land upon the Enchanted Islands
Creator
Samuel PalmerArtist · 1805–1881
All works by this person →A bookseller's son, Samuel Palmer was a delicate and withdrawn child who began a love affair with poetry that remained a lifelong inspiration for his art. Despite studying with a drawing master, he was mostly self-taught. Precocious, he exhibited at the Royal Academy at the age of fifteen in 1820.In 1822 Palmer met artist John Linnell, whom he described as "a good angel from Heaven to pluck me fro
More on Getty ULAN- Date
- 1849
- Medium
- Watercolor and bodycolor, with some gum arabic, over black chalk underdrawing
- Culture
- English
- Department
- Drawings
- Institution
- Getty Museum
In the boat to the left stand Sir Guyon and the palmer, a pilgrim holding a palm branch who has returned from the Holy Land. Phaedria stands in the boat to the right, gesturing across the Idle Lake to the Enchanted Isle on the right, replete with dancing nymphs glittering in the evening sun. The subject is adapted from a passage in the Faerie Queene, a poem first published in 1590 by the English writer Edmund Spenser. In the poem, however, Phaedria refused, much against Sir Guyon's wishes, to take the palmer as well, and he was left behind on the bank. In Samuel Palmer's adaptation, the palmer is included, presumably intended as an autobiographical reference. From the start, Samuel Palmer conceived this English Romantic narrative as a work of art in its own right. This visionary and idealized landscape is a highly finished and virtuoso display of his achievements with watercolor. From the dappled clouds to the melting sunlight that modulates all that it envelops, the range of technique is extraordinary. Much of the work was done with the point of the brush.
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