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Record Image
Title For of such is the Kingdom of Heaven
Artist Frank Bramley
Production Date 1891
Medium oil on canvas
Support canvas
Signature/Marks FRANK BRAMLEY (LR)
Size (hxw) 1829 x 2540mm
Classification Painting
Department International Art
Subject Headings mourning
singers
hymns
children (people by age group)
women
mourners
funerals
dresses
hats
flowers (plants)
deaths
wharves
piers (marine landings)
fishing villages
processions
Period / Style Victorian/European
Newlyn School
Credit Line Mackelvie Trust Collection, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki, purchased 1913
Copyright Status No known copyright restrictions
Collection Mackelvie Trust
Acquisition Method Long Term Loan
Accession Date 1913
Accession No M1913/1
Curator's Description Bramley spent eleven years at the artists' colony in Newlyn, Cornwall. The Newlyn School became known for its Cornish genre scenes and plein air approach, drawing in particular on what have been described as long, gentle moods of grey. Bramley combined social realism with the new practice of painting out of doors, trying to balance aesthetic concerns with the dramatic narrative so popular amongst Victorians, who had a great fondness for heart-rending sentimentalism and a fixation with social class. 'For of Such is the Kingdom of Heaven' (one of the most popular paintings in the Gallery's collection), presents child mortality as a grief common to all people, irrespective of wealth or class. Like all the young women in the cortège, the little girl clutching the expensive bouquet of chrysanthemums wears a white dress almost certainly bought for such an occasion. Her unhealthy pallor suggests that she may be the next to be carried off, perhaps by tuberculosis, which could rapidly wipe out entire families. The bowed head of the father may speak of filial loss, but as no male child is apparent in the group, it also suggests a double grief - the lack of a male heir. The sons and daughters of the local fishing folk, although wearing clothes that are patched and shabby, are ruddy-cheeked and sturdy, reflecting their more healthy outdoor life. (from The Guide, 2001)
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