Oil paintings such as this with subjects taken from popular literature steadily replaced commissions for history paintings in the early 19th century. The public and most collectors of modern works started to prefer lighter and sometimes more sentimental themes.
Leslie frequently used themes from humorous literature. Here he is illustrating a scene from a play by Molière, Les Femmes Savantes ('The Learned Ladies'), in which the conceited Trissotin reads a pretentious sonnet of his own composition to his admiring audience of literary ladies, the self-styled 'learned ladies' of the title. When this picture was exhibited at the Royal Academy in London in 1845, it was called A Scene from Molière and several lines from the play were quoted in the catalogue.
Although Leslie began his career as a history and portrait painter, he soon turned to literary themes. The collector John Sheepshanks (1787-1863) owned 17 paintings by Leslie with subjects taken from well-known authors such as Shakespeare, Chaucer and Molière.
日付
1845年
date QS:P571,+1845-00-00T00:00:00Z/9
技法
oil on canvas, with carved wood and composition frame
(Les Femmes Savantes, 1845, Charles Robert Leslie(RA), born 1794 - died 1859 Museum no. FA.117[O]
Techniques -
oil on canvas, with carved wood and composition frame
Place -
London, England (painted)
Dimensions -
Height 99 cm
Width 76.1 cm
Height 136 c)