This unfinished work is extremely striking because of the uniform treatment of the gold background and the gold drapery of the damozel. The modelled head and hair appear to float not so much on as in this flat and shallow gold surface. The effect is visually contradictory, as if DGR had introduced a realistic and even voluptuous image into the kind of space typical of iconic and even byzantine work.
The picture was begun as an early version of The Blessed Damozel, but DGR cut it downto a small single head pictureâ, as he told his studio assistant Treffry Dunn, after he had begun the larger picture again (quoted in Surtees, vol. 1, 142). DGR recovered the picture (probably in 1876, when he gave the picture to the Cowper-Temples) in order to have its background completely gilded, as it in fact comes down to us. Both the gold background and the lilies are later additions, and the outer edges of the hair were also reworked when the gilding was added. In reworking the picture DGR left the damozel's gold dress unfinished. Nonetheless, since he gave the picture as a present to the Cowper-Temples, DGR must have thought it completed.
The picture not only forms part of the sequence of Blessed Damozel paintings and drawings, but relates as well to the three-quarter length work known as Sancta Lilias .
Картина названа по одноимённому стихотворению Россетти, опубликованному в журнале Росток в 1850 году.
Россетти писал:" По передал горе оставшегося в живых любовника, я решил изменить условия и попытаться передать скорбь умершей возлюбленной на небесах.


Дама Святого Грааля.
The Damsel of the Sanct Grael
92*57,7 см 1874г.

Dimensions: 49 3/4 x 24 in.
Signature: Dante Gabriel Rossetti
Date on Image: 1874
Note: The signature and the date are written in Italian on a scroll at the lower left: “Dante Gabriel Rossetti ritrasse nel capo d'anno del 1874”.
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