1906
Oil on canvas
In The Tambourine Girl, Godward depicts one of his favorite Italian models as a Neoclassical maiden, centrally set against a carved marble frieze. Godward’s extraordinary technical mastery is evident in the handling of the young woman’s diaphanous purple coa vestis stola (the female variation of the ancient Roman toga), and classically inspired tan palla (Roman shawl). The artist sensually contrasts these vivid gossamer fabrics with the expertly rendered three-dimensionality of the cool, white frieze, which in turn is ensconced within a wall built of blue-black veined marble. The finely sculpted piece of stone shows several male figures in celebration as they dance and play musical instruments. In a clever juxtaposition of foreground and background features, Godward intentionally relates the details of the frieze with the subject of the central figure.
Three years later, Godward would paint a similar scene in which a Greco-Roman beauty also stands in contrapposto before a marble wall (sold in these rooms, May 23, 1996, lot 134), but here the figures in the ensconced frieze are female and portrayed as graceful maidens as composed as the model herself. By making small, subtle changes to setting, prop, or costume, Godward created a series of alluring scenes that fully explored his distinct vision of classical beauty. Like other artists of the Victorian period such a Frederic, Lord Leighton, Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, and Albert Moore, among others, Godward’s allegiance to Antique themes remained consistent throughout his career and became synonymous with an art of great aesthetic beauty and harmony.
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