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Helen and Cassandra: study of draperyFrederick Sandys
Date: 1866
Materials: Black chalk, touched with red and white
Academic drawingSandys had a love of academic life drawing, and the solid basis he derived from such studies underlies most of his full-length figurative work, even on the small scale demanded by book illustration.
'Helen and Cassandra' appeared in the magazine 'Once a Week' for 28 April 1866, alongside verses written by Alfred B. Richards to accompany the engraving.
The prophetess Cassandra chastises a sulky Helen (like the figure in 'If', moodily chewing a strand of hair), whose actions have led to the burning of Troy.
Elaborate executionFour drawings at Birmingham show Sandys's meticulous development of the image, from a nude study to the final design in pen and ink. Two drapery studies were done in between, one left incomplete and this sheet, a wonderful piece of draughtsmanship, both elaborate and subtle in execution. |
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