Lord Leighton PRA, Tracing for 'Captive Andromache'

Tracing for 'Captive Andromache', by ca. 1886-8

Lord Leighton PRA (1830 - 1896)

RA Collection: Art

These tracings all relate to Leighton's painting 'Captive Andromache' (c.1886-8, Manchester City Art Galleries). The subject of the painting is loosely based on a passage in Homer's Iliad in which the Trojan leader, Hector, reflects on the possible fate of his wife, Andromache, if he were to be killed. In the text, Hector remarks to his wife 'I see you there in Argos, toiling for some other woman at the loom, or carrying water from an alien well, a helpless drudge with no will of your own' (trans E.V. Rieu, 1950, p. 129).

The painting was exhibited with a quotation from Elizabeth Barrett Browning's translation of The Iliad:

'Some standing by,

Marking thy tears fall, shall say 'This is she,

The wife of that same Hector that fought best

Of all the Trojans when all fought for Troy.'

These tracings include four studies for the composition, one for a group of figures and one of a Greek vase. Unusually, two of the compositional tracings differ significantly from the finished painting. One appears to be an alternative, or early, version of the scene while the other includes many more figures than the final composition. The tracings also indicate that Leighton experimented with the pose of Andromache, who is shown in a frontal pose in one of these earlier versions. In the finished painting, the sense of Andromache's detachment and melancholic contemplation is accentuated by her profile pose.

All objects in this group

Object details

Title
Tracing for 'Captive Andromache'
Artist/designer
Lord Leighton PRA (1830 - 1896)
Date
by ca. 1886-8
Object type
Drawing
Medium
Pencil on tracing paper
Dimensions

196 mm x 396 mm

Collection
Royal Academy of Arts
Object number
04/698
Acquisition
Given by Augusta Matthews 1896 and Mrs Alexandra Orr 1896
return to start
back

Start exploring the RA Collection

read more
  • Explore art works, paint-smeared palettes, scribbled letters and more...
  • Artists and architects have run the RA for 250 years.
    Our Collection is a record of them.
Start exploring