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            <titlestmt>
                <title>Fazio's Mistress</title>
                <title>Aurelia</title>
                <author>Dante Gabriel Rossetti</author>
                
                
            </titlestmt>
            <editionstmt>
                <edition>1</edition>
                <copyright>ŠTate, London 2003</copyright>
            </editionstmt>
            <extent/>
            
            
            <notesstmt/>
            <sourcedesc>
                <citnstruct>
                    <title>Fazio's Mistress</title>
                    <title>Aurelia</title>
                    <artist>DGR</artist>
                    <note/>
                    <imageprod>
                        <date compdate="1863 1873">1863; 1873</date>
                        <exhibition>Liverpool Academy 1864 (no.149a); R.A. 1883 (no.300); Walker Art
                            Gallery, Liverpool, <hi rend="i">Grand Loan Exhibition</hi> 1886
                            (no.857); Guildhall 1892 (no.157); Bournemouth 1951 (no.19); Tate 1984
                            (repro); Tate 1997 (repro)</exhibition>
                        <copy/>
                        <copy/>
                        <intendedcontext/>
                        <patron>
                            <name>William Blackmore</name>
                            <date>1863</date>
                        </patron>
                        <originalcost/>
                        <note/>
                    </imageprod>
                    <provenance>
                        <location>Tate Gallery</location>
                        <recnum>3055</recnum>
                        <purchaseprice/>
                        <note/>
                        <archivehist>William Blackmore; George Rae; Tate Gallery</archivehist>
                    </provenance>
                    <physicaldesc>
                        <medium>oil</medium>
                        <technique/>
                        <dimensions>17 x 15 in.</dimensions>
                        <frame/>
                        <internalevidence>
                            <signature>DGR</signature>
                            <date>1863</date>
                            <assign/>
                            <other/>
                            <note>The monogram and date are inscribed at lower left.</note>
                        </internalevidence>
                        <restoration>
                            <date/>
                            <name/>
                            <desc/>
                        </restoration>
                        <note/>
                    </physicaldesc>
                    <reproduction>
                        <repro image="a.s164.studio.tif" width="608" height="725">
                            <bibl>
                                <title level="per">
                                    <hi rend="i">
                                        <xref doc="a.n1.s9.69.rad" workcode="s164" from="13">The Studio</xref>
                                    </hi>
                                </title>, <pages>13</pages>.</bibl>
                        </repro>
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                            <bibl>
                                <author>Gowans and Gray</author>, <xref doc="a.ac-gowans.759.2r735m393.rad" workcode="s164" from="28">
                                    <title level="bk">
                                        <hi rend="i">Masterpieces of DGR</hi>
                                    </title>
                                </xref>, <pages>28</pages>.</bibl>
                        </repro>
                        <repro image="a.unavailable.tif">
                            <bibl>
                                <author>Ash</author>, <xref doc="a.nd497.r8a9.rad" workcode="s164" link="dead">
                                    <title level="bk">
                                        <hi rend="i">Dante Gabriel Rossetti</hi>
                                    </title>
                                </xref>.</bibl>
                        </repro>
                        <repro image="a.s164.surtees.repro.tif">
                            <bibl>
                                <author>Surtees</author>, <xref doc="a.n6797.r58s9.vol2.rad" workcode="s164">
                                    <title level="bk">
                                        <hi rend="i">A Catalogue Raisonné</hi>
                                    </title>
                                </xref>, <pages>vol. 2, plate 234</pages>.</bibl>
                        </repro>
                    </reproduction>
                </citnstruct>
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            <classification>
                <scheme type="">
                    <keyword/>
                </scheme>
            </classification>
            <description/>
            <subject/>
            <addressee/>
            <model>
                <name>Fanny Cornforth</name>
                <note/>
            </model>
            <repainting>
                <date>1873</date>
                <desc>The picture was much reworked in 1873, but the head of the first model (Fanny
                    Cornforth) was not changed.</desc>
            </repainting>
            <source>
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                        <bibl/>
                        <note/>
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                        <culture/>
                        <bibl/>
                        <note/>
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                        <place/>
                        <date/>
                        <bibl/>
                        <note/>
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                        <place/>
                        <date/>
                        <bibl/>
                        <note/>
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                        <date/>
                        <bibl/>
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            <commentaries>
                <head>Commentary</head>
                <section type="intro">
                    <head>Introduction</head>
                    <p>This is an interesting and important picture. More than an act of homage to
                        Titian&#8212;though it is importantly that&#8212;the painting
                        incorporates, or calls out, three different worlds: Fanny Cornforth, the
                        sitter, is the locus of the picture's modernity; the Titianesque style and
                        the &#8220;<quote>bricabrac</quote>&#8221; (as DGR called it)
                        allude to sixteenth-century Venice; and the title makes reference to the
                        world of Dante and thirteenth-century Florence. The presence of the latter
                        was emphasized in the 1863 version of the picture because the frame then was
                        inscribed with part of the<xref doc="a.uberti001.rad" link="dead">canzone</xref> that Fazio degli Uberti had written to his
                        &#8220;Mistress,&#8221; and that led DGR to title the work as he did.</p>
                    <p>These three perspectives define the three chief points of reference for most
                        of DGR's work as a painter (primitive Italian, Venetian, modern). In this
                        respect the picture functions as a kind of allegory of the trajectory of
                        DGR's artistic career. When he told George Rae, in 1873, to change the title
                        and remove the text by Uberti from the frame, he was essentially arguing
                        that the picture should be seen only as a Venetian-inspired
                            &#8220;<quote>piece of colour.</quote>&#8221; The Ubertian
                        text, he came to think, introduced a perspective he wanted to suppress.</p>
                    <p>That act of suppression forecasts DGR's move to establish a dialectic of
                            &#8220;<quote>soul's beauty</quote>&#8221; and
                            &#8220;<quote>body's beauty</quote>&#8221; for his visionary
                        pursuits between about 1860 and 1875. Both represent poles of a single
                        idealizing process. DGR's move to Titian and Venetian models is a move to
                        explore idealized forms of embodiment, for which the figure of Mary
                        Magdalene was a christological form, a
                        &#8220;<quote>soul's</quote>&#8221; form. The image of Fazio's
                        mistress is a &#8220;<quote>body's</quote>&#8221; form of the same
                        idealizing state of being. It cannot be too strongly or too often emphasized
                        that pictures like these (or their dialectical counterparts like<xref doc="a.s168.rap">
                            <title level="pic">
                                <hi rend="i">Beata Beatrix</hi>
                            </title>
                        </xref>) are not representational. The female figures are what Blake called
                        &#8220;<quote>emanations</quote>&#8221;&#8212;exteriorized
                        projections of an experience of imaginative desire.</p>
                    <p>It is entirely characteristic of DGR that he would offer an act of pure
                        stylization&#8212;this highly ornamental work, this Venetian
                            &#8220;<quote>piece of colour</quote>&#8221;&#8212;as an
                        emblem of his imaginative ideal. Venetian art was infamous, particularly in
                        English readings of the history of art, as decorative and without meaning.
                        When DGR deploys the Venetian style as he does in this painting, he is in
                        effect arguing through an act of art-making. More than this, he is arguing
                        that the act of art is in itself meaningful as an idealizing process. By
                        contrast, an art that is representational and anecdotal commits itself, in
                        this way of thinking, to pragmatistic and quotidian meanings&#8212;at
                        their highest possibility, to moral meanings.</p>
                    <p>The picture can be usefully compared with Manet's <xref doc="a.op67.rap">
                            <title level="pic">
                                <hi rend="i">Olympia</hi>
                            </title>
                        </xref> (1863-1865). The latter's treatment of his Venetian models is boldly
                        ironical. There is no irony at all in DGR's picture. Manet uses Titian to
                        make a statement about beauty in the contemporary world. DGR, by contrast,
                        is not making any statement about the world at all&#8212;unless the
                        picture's implicit statement about the function of art can be taken as such.
                        DGR is rather seeking to demonstrate the power of art to make contact with
                        transhistorical orders. The picture is a demonstration of that power. Like
                        virtually all of DGR's art work, it is essentially an act of magic, and
                        perhaps hardly&#8212;or only secondarily&#8212;a &#8220;work
                        of art&#8221; in any academic sense.</p>
                </section>
                <section type="prodhist">
                    <head>Production History</head>
                    <p>DGR wrote to Ellen Heaton on 25 October 1863 that he was at work on this
                        picture, which he called &#8220;<quote>chiefly a piece of
                            colour</quote>&#8221; (see <bibl>
                                <author>Fredeman</author>, <xref doc="a.">
                                    <title level="bk">
                                        <hi rend="i">Correspondence</hi>
                                    </title>
                                </xref>, <pages>63. 95</pages>
                            </bibl>).  He finished it in November on a commission from William Blackmore but later (in 1873) he
                        took it back to do some alterations for George Rae, who had acquired the picture at that point and &#8220;<quote>wants some glazing</quote>&#8221;, as DGR  told
                        Fanny Cornforth (see letter of 24 September 1873, (see <bibl>
                            <author>Fredeman</author>, <xref doc="a.">
                                <title level="bk">
                                    <hi rend="i">Correspondence</hi>
                                </title>
                            </xref>, <pages>73. 289</pages>
                        </bibl>).   Marillier says that &#8220;<quote>in 1873. . .much of the
                            &#8216;<quote>bric-ŕ-brac</quote>&#8217; was
                        added</quote>&#8221; (<bibl>
                            <author>Marillier</author>, <xref doc="a.nd497.r8.m33.rad" workcode="s164" from="132">
                                <title level="bk">
                                    <hi rend="i">DGR: An Illstrated Memorial</hi>
                                </title>
                            </xref>, <pages>132</pages>
                        </bibl>), but according to DGR's letter to Rae of August 1869, the picture
                            &#8220;<quote>was done at a time when I had a mania for buying
                            bricabrac, and used to stick it into my pictures</quote>&#8221;
                        (quoted in <bibl>
                            <author>WMR</author>, <xref doc="a.nd497.r8r8.rad" workcode="s164" from="69">
                                <title level="bk">
                                    <hi rend="i">DGR as Designer and Writer</hi>
                                </title>
                            </xref>, <pages>69</pages>
                        </bibl>).</p>
                </section>
                <section type="recepthist">
                    <head>Reception</head>
                    <p>This has always been one of DGR's most admired works.</p>
                </section>
                <section type="icon">
                    <head>Iconograpic</head>
                    <p>The comb, brush, and perfume bottle, as well as the ornate mirror, emblemize
                        the worldliness of the lady's beauty.</p>
                </section>
                <section type="pictorial">
                    <head>Pictorial</head>
                    <p>Alastair Grieve calls attention to
                        &#8220;<quote>similarities</quote>&#8221; between this picture and
                        Whistler's <xref doc="a.op68.rap">
                            <title level="pic">
                                <hi rend="i">Symphony in White No. 2: The Little White Girl</hi>
                            </title>
                        </xref> (1864), but he adds what has always been recognized, that the
                        picture is most in debt to DGR's study of Titian and the Venetian School in
                        general (see <bibl>
                            <xref doc="a.ac-tate1984.rad" workcode="s164" from="200" link="dead">
                                <title level="bk">
                                    <hi rend="i">The Pre-Raphaelites</hi>
                                </title>
                            </xref>, Tate 1984, <pages>200</pages>
                        </bibl>). DGR's painting is especially indebted in Titian's <xref doc="a.op40.rap">
                            <title level="pic">
                                <hi rend="i">Young Woman at Her Toilette</hi>
                            </title>
                        </xref>, which he would have seen on his trips to Paris, and initially in 1849.</p>
                    <p>A comparison between DGR's painting and Manet's famous <xref doc="a.op67.rap">
                            <title level="pic">
                                <hi rend="i">Olympia</hi>
                            </title>
                        </xref>, which was being done about the same time (1863-1865), is highly
                        instructive. Dianne Sachko Macleod has an excellent <xref doc="a.apollo.001.rad" link="dead">discussion</xref> of the matter along
                        traditional Modernist lines.</p>
                    <p>The picture has much in common with DGR's watercolor of 1864, <xref doc="a.s174.rap">
                            <title level="pic">
                                <hi rend="i">Woman Combing Her Hair</hi>
                            </title>
                        </xref>, and of course to the original version of<xref doc="a.2-1867.s205.raw">
                            <title level="pic">
                                <hi rend="i">Lady Lilith</hi>
                            </title>
                        </xref>; the sitter in both is once again Fanny Cornforth.</p>
                </section>
                <section type="historical">
                    <head>Historical</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="literary">
                    <head>Literary</head>
                    <p>In its original conception the picture was done as a pendant to Fazio degli
                        Uberti's <xref doc="a.1-1861.rad" workcode="236d-1861">
                            <title level="wrk">
                                <hi rend="i">Canzone</hi>
                            </title>
                        </xref> (<foreign lang="italian">Io miro i crespi e gli biondi
                        capegli</foreign>) translated by DGR and included in his<xref doc="a.1-1861.rad">
                            <title level="doc">
                                <hi rend="i">Early Italian Poets</hi>
                            </title>
                        </xref> collection. But later, in August 1869, he told George
                        Rae&#8212;who owned the picture at that point&#8212;that it 
                        &#8220;ought to be re-named.  It was always an absurd misnomer in a hurry, and the thing is much too full of queer details to embody the poem quoted which is a thirteenth century production.  Do have the writing on the frame effaced and call it anything else.  Aurelia would do very well for the golden hair.  I don't think it's bad, but it was done at a time when I had a mania for buying bric-ŕ-brac and used to stick it into my pictures&#8221; (letter to George Rae, 21 August 1869, <bibl>
                            <author>Fredeman</author>, <xref doc="a.">
                                <title level="bk">
                                    <hi rend="i">Correspondence</hi>
                                </title>
                            </xref>, <pages>69. 132</pages>
                        </bibl>).
                        </p>
                </section>
                <section type="autobio">
                    <head>Autobiographical</head>
                    <p/>
                </section>
                <section type="biblio">
                    <head>Bibliographic</head>
                    <p>
                        <bibl>
                            <author>Ash</author>, <xref doc="a.nd497.r8a9.rad" workcode="s164" link="dead">
                                <title level="bk">
                                    <hi rend="i">Dante Gabriel Rossetti</hi>
                                </title>
                            </xref>.</bibl>
                                                                            <bibl>
                            <author>Benedetti</author>, <xref doc="a.nc242.r646.rad" from="240" to="241" workcode="9-1879.s162" link="dead">
                                <title level="bk">
                                    <hi rend="i">Dante Gabriel Rossetti</hi>
                                </title>
                            </xref>, <pages>240-241</pages>.</bibl>
                        <bibl>
                            <author>Bullen</author>, <title level="wrk">
                                <xref doc="a.nx543.b85.1998.rad" link="dead">
                                    <hi rend="i">The Pre-Raphaelite Body</hi>
                                </xref>
                            </title>, <pages>127-130</pages>.</bibl>
                        <bibl>
                            <author>Gowans and Gray</author>,<xref doc="a.ac-gowans.759.2r735m393.rad" workcode="s164" from="28">
                                <title level="bk">
                                    <hi rend="i">Masterpieces of Rossetti</hi>
                                </title>
                            </xref>, <pages>28</pages>.</bibl>
                        <bibl>
                            <author>Macleod</author>, <xref doc="a.">&#8220;<title level="es">DGR and Titian</title>&#8221;</xref>
                            <date> 1985</date>, <pages>36-39</pages>. </bibl>
                        <bibl>
                            <author>Marillier</author>, <xref doc="a.nd497.r8.m33.rad" workcode="s164" from="132">
                                <title level="bk">
                                    <hi rend="i">DGR: An Illustrated Memorial</hi>
                                </title>
                            </xref>, <pages>132</pages>.</bibl>
                        <bibl>
                            <author>WMR</author>, <xref doc="a.nd497.r8r8.rad" workcode="s164" from="68" to="69">
                                <title level="bk">
                                    <hi rend="i">DGR as Designer and Writer</hi>
                                </title>
                            </xref>, <pages>68-69</pages>.</bibl>
                        <bibl>
                            <author>Sharp</author>, <xref doc="a.nd497.r8s5.rad" workcode="s164" from="183" to="186" link="dead">
                                <title level="bk">
                                    <hi rend="i">DGR: A Record and a Study</hi>
                                </title>
                            </xref>, <pages>186-187</pages>.</bibl>
                        <bibl>
                            <author>Surtees</author>, <xref doc="a.n6797.r58s9.vol1.rad" workcode="s164" from="92" to="93" link="dead">
                                <title level="bk">
                                    <hi rend="i">A Catalogue Raisonné</hi>
                                </title>
                            </xref>, <pages>vol. 1, 92-93 (no. 164)</pages>.</bibl>
                        <bibl>
                            <author>Surtees</author>, <xref doc="a.n6797.r58s9.vol2.rad" workcode="s164" link="dead">
                                <title level="bk">
                                    <hi rend="i">A Catalogue Raisonné</hi>
                                </title>
                            </xref>
                            <pages> vol. 2, (plate 234)</pages>.</bibl>
                        <bibl>
                            <xref doc="a.ac-tate1997.rad" workcode="s164" from="98" to="100" link="dead">
                                <title level="bk">
                                    <hi rend="i">The Age of Rossetti, Burne-Jones, and Watts</hi>
                                </title>, Tate 1997</xref>, <pages>98-100</pages>.</bibl>
                        <bibl>
                            <xref doc="a.ac-tate1984.rad" workcode="s164" from="200" link="dead">
                                <title level="bk">
                                    <hi rend="i">The Pre-Raphaelites</hi>, Tate 1984</title>
                            </xref>, <pages>200</pages>.</bibl>
                        <bibl>
                            <xref doc="a.n1.s9.69.rad" workcode="s164" from="13">
                                <title level="per">
                                    <hi rend="i">The Studio</hi>
                                </title>
                            </xref>, Vol. 69,<pages> 13</pages>.</bibl>
                    </p>
                </section>
            </commentaries>
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