The Queen of Sheba

Description

A celebrated artist of the golden age of British book illustration, the French-born Edmund Dulac was inspired by Persian miniatures and manuscript illustration. This watercolor was one of a series of four scenes painted to accompany a poem by André Dumas, Figures of the Orient. Dulac depicted legendary enchantresses of the East: Circe, Salome, Scheherazade, and here, the Queen of Sheba. Aloft a camel, the dark-haired beauty languorously surveys the arid landscape as she and her entourage approach the Holy Land. Vibrant silks spill out of the queen’s gold and lapis howdah, a veritable mosaic of texture and pattern.

Provenance

James Parmelee [1855-1931], Washington, DC, by descent to Alice Maury Parmelee, Washington, DC (?-1931); Alice Maury Parmelee [1862-1940], Washington, DC, bequeathed to the Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1931-1940); Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1940-)

The Queen of Sheba

Edmund Dulac

1911

Accession Number

1940.738

Medium

Pen and brown ink, watercolor, and gouache, with graphite and color wax crayon, on artist’s drawing board

Dimensions

Sheet: 31.6 x 25.4 cm (12 7/16 x 10 in.)

Classification

Drawing

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Bequest of James Parmelee