Miss Eveleen Tennant by John Everett Millais - 1874 - 1079 × 800 mm Tate Britain Miss Eveleen Tennant by John Everett Millais - 1874 - 1079 × 800 mm Tate Britain

Miss Eveleen Tennant

oil on canvas • 1079 × 800 mm
  • John Everett Millais - June 8, 1829 - August 13, 1896 John Everett Millais 1874

Millais was one of the most successful society portrait painters of the late 19th century. Miss Eveleen Tennant is painted with the bold and fluent handling of paint and rich impasto (a thick buildup of oil paint) characteristic of a new approach, which he had adopted in the 1860s. This style is in stark contrast to the high finish and minute detail of his earlier Pre-Raphaelite works. Millais's working methods as a portraitist were notoriously energetic and were noted by several of his sitters. It was once remarked that he must have walked at least a mile in the course of each sitting.

Tennant posed for the Pre-Raphaelite painters George Frederic Watts and John Everett Millais. Later she became a photographer, taking pictures of her family and visitors. She was self-taught.

P.S. Millais was fascinated by William Shakespeare plays. He painted the famous Ophelia and other Shakespearean characters