Laura Reading
Image source: commons.wikimedia.org

Laura Reading

Support Type: Canvas
Paint Type: Oil Paint
Current Location: Christie\'s

This painting by Walter Crane depicts a young brunette woman named Laura reading a small book. Without understanding the context of this painting, one would immediately notice the white and green dress that Laura is wearing, along with the design of the wall and the floor. The Middle Eastern-style attire and the room design are examples of Orientalism in Victorian art, which would be expected, considering the vast British Empire and exchanges between Europe and Asia during the Victorian era. The woman in Crane’s painting is commonly believed to be Laura de Noves, a French noblewoman that the Italian poet Francesco Petrarca, commonly known as Petrarch, who was born in Arezzo, Italy, but was raised in Avignon, France, had an unrequited love for, similar to another Italian poet, Dante Alighieri, best known for the Divine Comedy, and his famous love for Beatrice Portinari. Although Laura ended up marrying Count Hugues de Sade, the ancestor of the French libertine writer Marquis de Sade, she became the inspiration for many of Petrarch’s sonnets. Crane’s portrayal of Laura seems to have been inspired by his wife, Mary Frances Crane (née Andrews), revealing his devotion for her by portraying her through a lesser-known love that inspired another artist.

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Information Compiled by Victoria Sofia Jung
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