Description
In this drawing, Aubrey Beardsley illustrates an early scene in Alexander Pope’s satirical masterpiece The Rape of the Lock (1712) in which the heroine, Belinda, primps in her boudoir. Reflecting the poem’s emphasis on contrived rather than natural beauty, the drawing is densely layered with artifice. A view of an idyllic garden with a cupola-topped pavilion is glimpsed not through a window as it would first seem, but on a folding screen. The bejeweled bottles littering the table serve as emblems of Belinda’s vanity.
Provenance
(R. A. Walker, Bedford, England, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH) (?-1953); Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1953-)
Accession Number
1953.136
Medium
pen and black ink with traces of graphite underdrawing
Dimensions
Sheet: 25.6 x 17.4 cm (10 1/16 x 6 7/8 in.)
Classification
Drawing
Credit Line
Dudley P. Allen Fund