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Cleveland Museum of Art

Spotted

William Holman Hunt — Mary Walker Waugh
William Holman Hunt

Mary Walker Waugh

1868

William Holman Hunt painted this portrait of Mary Walker Waugh (1805–1886)—his mother-in-law—during a time of personal tragedy. Waugh’s daughter Fanny Waugh Hunt (1832–1866), the wife of the artist, had recently died following childbirth. References to loss of life infiltrate the composition: the sitter wears black mourning attire, and behind her is a screen decorated with red poppies, a traditional symbol of unconsciousness and lifelessness because of its pharmaceutical use as a source for opiates. In Victorian society, the red poppy also signified consolation.

Medium
oil on fabric

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About this work

William Holman Hunt, Mary Walker Waugh, 1868

William Holman Hunt painted this portrait of Mary Walker Waugh (1805–1886)—his mother-in-law—during a time of personal tragedy. Waugh’s daughter Fanny Waugh Hunt (1832–1866), the wife of the artist, had recently died following childbirth. References to loss of life infiltrate the composition: the sitter wears black mourning attire, and behind her is a screen decorated with red poppies, a traditional symbol of unconsciousness and lifelessness because of its pharmaceutical use as a source for opiates. In Victorian society, the red poppy also signified consolation.

Medium
oil on fabric
Year
1868
Seen at
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH

Related themes

Modern, Unique Work

More works by William Holman Hunt

Collected by

Cleveland Museum of Art, Art Institute of Chicago