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Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level C , Case EE, Shelf 173

About Fairies

Etching
ca 1879 (etched)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Sentimental paintings of children were extremely popular with Victorian audiences. Critics often dismissed such pictures as intellectually undemanding, yet some of the most important artists of the day took up the subject. The emotion of these pictures centre on a new, 19th -century conception of childhood as an innocent, separate state to be shielded and prolonged. They seek a protective, affectionate pang from the viewer and evoke nostalgia for the inevitably fleeting nature of childhood.

Charles Dickens wrote that fairytales ‘keep us in some sense ever young, by preserving through our worldly ways, one slender track not overgrown with weeds, where we may walk with children sharing their delights’.


Object details

Category
Object type
TitleAbout Fairies (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
etching on paper
Brief description
G. B. O'Neill; About Fairies; etching
Physical description
Etching showing an interior with three children huddled together reading a book by an open window
Dimensions
  • Size of sheet height: 42.4cm
  • Size of sheet width: 28.5cm
  • Size of platemark height: 25.0cm
  • Size of platemark width: 18.7cm
  • Size of image height: 20.6cm
  • Size of image width: 15.3cm
Marks and inscriptions
G O'Neill (Artist's signature in pencil in the bottom right-hand corner)
Gallery label
George Bernard O'Neill 1828-1917 About Fairies About 1879 Charles Dickens wrote that fairytales 'keep us in some sense ever young, by preserving through our worldly ways, one slender track not overgrown with weeds, where we may walk with children sharing their delights'. [34 words] Etching Museum no. 29325.14(December 2007)
Production
This impression is before letter. The print was later published by 'The Etching Club' in 1879
Subject depicted
Summary
Sentimental paintings of children were extremely popular with Victorian audiences. Critics often dismissed such pictures as intellectually undemanding, yet some of the most important artists of the day took up the subject. The emotion of these pictures centre on a new, 19th -century conception of childhood as an innocent, separate state to be shielded and prolonged. They seek a protective, affectionate pang from the viewer and evoke nostalgia for the inevitably fleeting nature of childhood.

Charles Dickens wrote that fairytales ‘keep us in some sense ever young, by preserving through our worldly ways, one slender track not overgrown with weeds, where we may walk with children sharing their delights’.
Collection
Accession number
29325:14

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Record createdJanuary 4, 2007
Record URL
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