Paul Delaroche: A Painter Whose Subjects Meet Untimely Ends
The National Gallery in London is presenting a painting by Paul Delaroche (1787-1856), The Execution of Lady Jane Grey (1833), part of an exhibition of his paintings and one of a number subjects who met a brutal end:
"Lady Jane Grey was Queen of England for just 9 days until she was driven from the throne and sent to the Tower of London to be executed."
"Jane became queen after the death of her cousin, Edward VI in 1553. As a Protestant, Jane was crowned queen in a bid to shore up Protestantism and keep Catholic influence at bay."
"The plan didn't work. Jane's claim to the crown was much weaker than Edward VI's half sister Mary. Mary, a Catholic, had popular support and soon replaced Jane as queen."
"Lady Jane Grey was executed at Tower Green on 12 February 1554. She was just 16 years old."
"In this painting, she is guided towards the execution block by Sir John Brydges, Lieutenant of the Tower. The straw on which the block rests was intended to soak up the victim's blood. The executioner stands impassive to the right and two ladies in attendance are shown grieving to the left."
"The painting was exhibited in Paris at the city's famous Salon in 1834, where it caused a sensation."
Jane was not the only unfortunate who Paul Delaroche painted who found themselves in prison: Joan of Arc appears in an 1825 painting now in the Wallace Collection in London when she is in prison being interviewed by the Cardinal of Winchester. And at the Musee of Conde in France, The Murder of the Duke of Guise represents another historic end of a noble.
The Princes in the Tower (also known as The Children of Edward) and Marie Antoinette leaving the convention after her sentence are two additional paintings in the exhibit that continue a theme of foreshadowing death.
More Articles
- Creating Poster Session Papers Based on the Exhibit Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imagination
- Elisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun: Woman Artist in Revolutionary France Amassing a Fortune
- Kings, Queens, and Courtiers: Royalty on Paper
- Marie Antoinette's Wardrobe (Don't Just Settle for the Shoes)
- The Louvre's Breguet Exhibition and the Marie Antoinette