- Peace Concluded
Infobox Painting
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image_size=250px
title= Peace Concluded, 1856
artist=John Everett Millais
year= 1856
type=Oil on canvas
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width=
height_inch=46
width_inch =36
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city=Minneapolis
museum=Minneapolis Institute of Arts "Peace Concluded, 1856" (1856) is a painting by
John Everett Millais which depicts a wounded British officer readingThe Times newspaper's report of the end of theCrimean war . It was exhibited at theRoyal Academy in 1856 to mixed reviews, but was strongly endorsed by the criticJohn Ruskin who proclaimed that in the future it would be recognised as "among the world's best masterpieces". [Ruskin, John, Academy Notes, 1856, Cook and Wedderburn, Ruskin: Complete Writings, vol 14, pp.56-7] The central figure in the painting is a portrait of Millais's wifeEffie Gray , who had previously been married to Ruskin, but had left her husband for the artist.ubject
There is some evidence that Millais originally intended the painting to be satirical - an attack on pampered officers who were allowed to go home for so-called "urgent private affairs", while ordinary soldiers were forced to live in poor conditions in the Crimea. When the war ended, the satire seemed obsolete, so he changed it to a portrayal of a wounded officer recuperating at home. [Hancher, M. (1991), "'Urgent Private Affairs': Millais’s 'Peace Concluded, 1856'", Burlington Magazine, vol. 133, Aug., p. 499.]
The officer is depicted lying with an
Irish wolfhound at his feet, while his wife rests on the sofa, and partly on his lap; behind her head a largemyrtle bush sprouts, a traditional symbol of eternal love. He has put aside a chapter ofWilliam Makepeace Thackeray 's novelThe Newcomes (the yellow booklet behind his head) to read the newspaper.The two children have been playing with a wooden box in the form of
Noah's ark , a popular toy in this period. It contains models of various animals, some of which have been placed on the mother's lap. Each animal symbolises one of the combatants in the Crimean war. TheGallic rooster is the symbol ofFrance ; thelion of Britain; the bear ofRussia ; the turkey of theOttoman empire (based inTurkey ). The child at the left has just picked a dove from the box, symbolising peace. [ [http://www.artsmia.org/world-myths/viewallart/peace_background.html#4 World Myths and Legends in Art; Minneapolis Institute of Arts] ] The rich fabric of the mother's dress creates a large red patch under the toys, suggestive of blood. The girl on the right holds up her father's campaign medal, looking at him questioningly.In the background is a print of
: by
"The Death of Major Peirson"John Singleton Copley , depicting the death of a British officer defendingJersey (Millais's family home) during theBattle of Jersey (1781).Reception
Ruskin's elaborate praise of the painting emphasised Millais's increasing mastery of colour, which the critic compared to
Titian . Other critics were less impressed. An opponent of the Pre-Raphaelites stated that the "coats, hats, trousers" all had more vitality than the people. [Young, E. (1857), "Pre-Raffaelitism, or a Popular Enquiry into Some Newly Asserted Principles Connected with the Philosophy, Poetry, Religion and Revolution of Art London", p. 240] Some of Millais's Pre-Raphaelite colleagues also disliked the picture. [ [http://www.artsconnected.org/search/text.cfm?DBowner=mia&id=1330&nonav=no "Peace Concluded by Millais: An Important Pre-Raphaelite Painting", "The Minneapolis Institute of Arts Bulletin"] .]The painting is now owned by the
Minneapolis Institute of Arts .Notes
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