1903
Oil on canvas
Though greatly influenced by his mentor, Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, John William Godward distinguishes himself through his striking images of a single female model. In his study of Victorian painters of classical subjects, Christopher Wood described Godward's career: "the best, and most serious of Alma-Tadema's followers was John William Godward.... All his life he devoted himself only to classical subjects, invariably involving girls in classical robes on marble terraces, but painted with a degree of technical mastery that almost rivals that of Alma-Tadema. Godward was also an admirer of Lord Leighton, and his figures do sometimes achieve a monumentality lacking in the work of most of Alma-Tadema's followers" (Christopher Wood, Olympian Dreamers, Victorian Classical Painters 1860 - 1914, London, 1983, p. 247).
Interestingly, a sense of monumentality is achieved in this intimate portrait. The subject is viewed almost imperceptably from below, which emphasizes her goddess-like status. Her head is framed by an impressive marble wall and gilt pilaster, which provide a showcase for Godward's unrivalled mastery of painting textures and, in particular, these contrasting slabs of marble. The composition also displays many of the hallmarks of the wider aesthetic movement prevelant at the end of the century, which promoted the importance of formal and sensual qualities over visual narrative. The sitter was Godward's favorite model, an Italian woman who some scholars suggest may have been his mistress, and his affection for her is immediately evident in his intensely careful treatment. Vern G. Swanson remarks that Contemplation was "perhaps the best 'head' by Godward during the first years of the century" (Swanson, 1988, p. 71).
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