Il Ramoscello - Dante Gabriel Rossetti
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Description
A portrait of Alice Wilding by Dante Gabriel Rossetti, featuring a woman holding a myrtle branch against a dark, atmospheric background.
Painted in 1865, Il Ramoscello depicts a woman holding a small branch, a motif that gives the work its Italian title. The subject is identified as Alice Wilding, a frequent model for Rossetti during this period. She is presented in a half-length pose, her gaze directed away from the viewer, which creates a sense of quiet introspection. The composition is tightly framed, focusing attention on the textures of her clothing, the delicate lace at her shoulder, and the smooth, pale skin of her face and hands. Rossetti employs a dark, moody background that contrasts with the luminosity of the figure. The inclusion of a small silver vessel on the marble ledge in the foreground adds a tactile element to the scene. The branch she holds, likely myrtle, carries symbolic weight often associated with love and marriage in Renaissance art, a tradition Rossetti frequently referenced in his own work. The painting reflects the artist's shift toward a more decorative and aesthetic style, moving away from the strict narrative realism of his earlier Pre-Raphaelite years. The colour palette is restrained, dominated by deep greens and muted greys, which allows the warm tones of the model's hair and skin to emerge. The brushwork is precise, particularly in the rendering of the lace and the metallic sheen of the vessel. This work is characteristic of Rossetti's mid-career output, where he focused on the creation of idealised female figures. The painting remains a clear example of his interest in the intersection of classical symbolism and Victorian aestheticism, capturing a moment of stillness that invites close observation of its material details.
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Each print is produced to order using 12-colour giclée printing on FSC-certified archival paper. Designed in Britain and printed at your nearest production hub to reduce waste and speed up delivery.
Il Ramoscello - Dante Gabriel Rossetti
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Specific Features
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- Dust gently with a soft, dry cloth
- Avoid prolonged direct sunlight
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Materials & Sizing
Museum-grade giclée on FSC-certified archival matte paper, with framed and canvas options.
- Paper sizes: A4, A3, A2, A1, A0 and B2 (50×70 cm)
- Canvas: XS (20×30 cm) to Large (60×90 cm)
- Frames: black, natural wood, dark wood or white
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Artist Biography
Dante Gabriel Rossetti
He was born in London to an Italian political exile and named after the author of the Divine Comedy. His father was a professor of Italian at King's College. The household ran on poetry, politics, and argument. Rossetti wrote verse throughout his life and considered himself a poet as much as a painter.
His early paintings are small, bright, and meticulously detailed in the Pre-Raphaelite manner. The Girlhood of Mary Virgin and Ecce Ancilla Domini have the flat, jewelled quality of medieval altarpieces. After 1860 the style changed. The paintings became larger, more sensual, and dominated by the face and figure of Jane Burden, who was William Morris's wife.
The relationship between Rossetti, Morris, and Jane is one of the more uncomfortable triangles in art history. Morris married her. Rossetti painted her obsessively. She modelled for Proserpine, La Pia de' Tolomei, and dozens of other works in which she appears as a mythological woman trapped in an unwanted situation. Whether the affair was physical remains debated. Morris, characteristically, said nothing publicly and channelled his feelings into wallpaper.
Rossetti buried a manuscript of his poems in his wife Lizzie Siddal's coffin when she died of a laudanum overdose in 1862. Seven years later he had the coffin exhumed to retrieve them. He published the poems. He was addicted to chloral hydrate by then and increasingly paranoid. He died in 1882, at fifty-three.
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