Lot Essay
Fairy painting was a distinctive genre in Victorian Art, and one which was accorded a retrospective exhibition at the Royal Academy in London in 1997 in which this picture was shown. Old religious certainties were being overturned by advances in scientific discovery, and there was a heightened interest in spiritualism, the occult, and the natural world. At the theatre, the ballet and in literature, fantasy proved popular, and artists responded to this trend in the visual arts. Naish’s Midsummer Night's Fairies became one of the most celebrated manifestations of the phenomenon in painting.
The Art Journal, when reviewing this picture when it was shown at the British Institution in 1856 noted: 'the flowers and minute figures admit of the closest examination.' Christopher Wood liked to imagine a Victorian gentleman, examining the fairies in particular, eyeglass in hand. Indeed the congested detail and botanical accuracy show the influence of the Pre-Raphaelites, whose brotherhood was founded less than a decade previously. The artist’s vision is enhanced by the bright colors, hard edged outlines and theatrical lighting, making the scene even more insistently real. The scene evokes those in Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, although no quotation citing act and verse is appended to the title. Moreover, the flowers are not those of Shakespeare’s day, but are those familiar to a Victorian gardener: fuschia, geranium and nasturtium. These were not chosen for their symbolism in the detailed lexicography of the Victorian 'language of flowers', but rather for their decorative effect. Insects are used as a means of transport for the fairies, and the spider alludes to their magical powers of spinning and weaving. Traces of their fairy kingdoms would be found spun and suspended after dawn in the morning dew, making belief in fairies widespread in rural communities well into the 20th century.
The Art Journal, when reviewing this picture when it was shown at the British Institution in 1856 noted: 'the flowers and minute figures admit of the closest examination.' Christopher Wood liked to imagine a Victorian gentleman, examining the fairies in particular, eyeglass in hand. Indeed the congested detail and botanical accuracy show the influence of the Pre-Raphaelites, whose brotherhood was founded less than a decade previously. The artist’s vision is enhanced by the bright colors, hard edged outlines and theatrical lighting, making the scene even more insistently real. The scene evokes those in Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, although no quotation citing act and verse is appended to the title. Moreover, the flowers are not those of Shakespeare’s day, but are those familiar to a Victorian gardener: fuschia, geranium and nasturtium. These were not chosen for their symbolism in the detailed lexicography of the Victorian 'language of flowers', but rather for their decorative effect. Insects are used as a means of transport for the fairies, and the spider alludes to their magical powers of spinning and weaving. Traces of their fairy kingdoms would be found spun and suspended after dawn in the morning dew, making belief in fairies widespread in rural communities well into the 20th century.