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  • Sir John Everett Millais
    Jun 08, 1829 - Aug 13, 1896
  • Robert Arthur Talbot Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury - Sir John Everett Millais, 1st Baronet PRA was an English painter and illustrator who was one of the founders of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. He was a child prodigy who, aged eleven, became the youngest student to enter the Royal Academy Schools. The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood was founded at his family home in London, at 83 Gower Street. Millais became the most famous exponent of the style.
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Robert Arthur Talbot Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury
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  • Sir John Everett Millais
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  • 1883
    Oil on canvas
    127.3 cm (50.12 in.) x 93.3 cm (36.73 in.)
    National Portrait Gallery, London, United Kingdom.

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Other paintings by Sir John Everett Millais:

Reverend John Caird, Principal of Glasgow University
Reverend John Caird, Principal of Glasgow University
Reverend John Perkins
Reverend John Perkins
Robert Rankin
Robert Rankin
Rosalind in the Forest
Rosalind in the Forest
Sir John Everett MillaisSir John Everett Millais, 1st Baronet ( MIL-ay, also US: mil-AY; 8 June 1829 – 13 August 1896) was an English painter and illustrator who was one of the founders of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. He was a child prodigy who, aged eleven, became the youngest student to enter the Royal Academy Schools. The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood was founded at his family home in London, at 83 Gower Street (now number 7). Millais became the most famous exponent of the style, his painting Christ in the House of His Parents (1850) generating considerable controversy, and painting perhaps the embodiment of the school, Ophelia, in 1850-51.

By the mid-1850s Millais was moving away from the Pre-Raphaelite style to develop a new form of realism in his art. His later works were enormously successful, making Millais one of the wealthiest artists of his day, but some former admirers including William Morris saw this as a sell-out (Millais notoriously allowed one of his paintings to be used for a sentimental soap advertisement). While these and early 20th-century critics, reading art through the lens of Modernism, viewed much of his later production as wanting, this perspective has changed in recent decades, as his later works have come to be seen in the context of wider changes and advanced tendencies in the broader late nineteenth-century art world, and can now be seen as predictive of the art world of the present.

Millais's personal life has also played a significant role in his reputation. His wife Effie was formerly married to the critic John Ruskin, who had supported Millais's early work. The annulment of the marriage and her wedding to Millais have sometimes been linked to his change of style, but she became a powerful promoter of his work and they worked in concert to secure commissions and expand their social and intellectual circles.