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Painting words: Severn’s visual dialogue with Keats inThe Fountain(1828)
- Source :
- Word & Image. 31:288-304
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- Informa UK Limited, 2015.
-
Abstract
- Although the painter Joseph Severn left little in the way of textual commentary on Keats’s poetry in his extensive body of letters and memoirs, he did offer a rich analysis and response to the poet’s verse in his artwork, especially his portraits and his best early painting, The Fountain (1828). The picture not only provides a sophisticated reading of “Ode on a Grecian Urn” (1819) but also offers a coded assessment of Keats’s legacy. Further, it wrestles with the public debate over the causes of Keats’s death and, in the end, acts as a complex private memorial to the intense friendship between painter and poet. Severn’s picture takes as its textual source an influential poem by Samuel Rogers and as its visual sources a network of paintings, sculpture, and sketches that lend a multidimensional context to what appears at first to be a straightforward Italian genre scene. Together with key passages from his letters, these artworks persuade us that Severn had more on his mind than a pastoral landscape...
Details
- ISSN :
- 19432178 and 02666286
- Volume :
- 31
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Word & Image
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........1267eb5cbf89410325bfb0940a7bc99b
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1080/02666286.2015.1047665