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[스크랩] [J.W. Waterhouse] the Lady of Shalott (1888)

鶴山 徐 仁 2006. 2. 4. 15:19

the Lady of Shalott

 

[Oil on canvas, 60 1/8 x 78 5/8 inches (153 x 200 cm), Tate Gallery, London,

England]

 

 

The legend of the Lady of Shalott supposedly takes place during the time

of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table.

The lady is imprisoned in a small castle by a fairy who tells her that if she

looks upon Camelot a curse will come upon her, but she does not know

what the curse is.

In the castle the Lady of Shalott has a mirror in which she can see shadows

of what is happening in Camelot.

She enjoys weaving the images she sees on a magical loom.

One day she sees the knight Lancelot through the mirror and falls madly

in love with him.

She decides to leave Shalott and take the chance that she will be able to

gaze upon his face and enter Camelot.

As soon as she steps out of the castle the mirror cracks and she knows

the curse has fallen upon her.

She runs down to the water, boards a small boat, and heads off towards

Camelot, but sadly she dies just before reaching it.

Her dead body is found in the boat which floats to Camelot’s shore,

her name written around its prow.

The Lady of Shalott is said to foreshadow the downfall of Camelot.

Just as Sir Lancelot was the Lady of Shalott's destruction, his affair with

Queen Guinevere leads to the destruction of Camelot.

Waterhouse fully captured the Lady in her crazed, frantic state, desperately

trying to reach Camelot, dying as she goes.

On the front of the boat surrounded by candles lies a cross, with the image

of Jesus nailed to it, symbolizing her willingness to sacrifice her life for love.

The tapestry she is sitting on is one she wove on her loom, depicting scenes

of Camelot.

The two images on the tapestry that can be seen are the Lady of Shalott

herself riding toward Camelot in the boat, and sir Lancelot on a horse

surrounded by other knights.

Waterhouse depicted other images from the legend one in 1894,

also entitled The Lady of Shalott, and another one in 1915 entitled

"I'm half sick of shadows", whose title was quoted from Tennyson’s poem

"The Lady of Shalott".

 

[by Kara Ross]


 
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