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Meg Merrilies by Thaxter in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, January 2018

Meg Merrilies by Thaxter in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, January 2018
Meg Merrilies

Edward R. Thaxter (American, 1857–1881)

about 1881

Object Place: Florence, Italy

Medium/Technique: Marble

Dimensions Overall: 66.68 x 46.99 x 38.74 cm (26 1/4 x 18 1/2 x 15 1/4 in.)
Mount (1/2" S.S. steel rod / dry mounted onto steel plate Nagoya): 1.4 x 30.5 x 25.4 cm (9/16 x 12 x 10 in.)

Credit Line: William E. Nickerson Fund

Accession Number: 63.5

Collections: Americas

Classifications: Sculpture

Meg Merrilies is the ugly, half-mad gypsy in Sir Walter Scott's novel "Guy Mannering" (1815). Like West's "King Lear," exhibited nearby, the sculpture speaks to the wild and fearsome aspects of life-the exact opposite of the calm, classicism often represented in art. Thaxter, originally from Maine, worked in Florence. He drew upon a variety of visual sources, from Hellenistic Roman images of haggard market women to the dramatic marbles of the great Baroque sculptor Gian Lorenzo Bernini.

Provenance: 1963, The Crown Studio, through John Cunningham, New York (accesseion date January 9, 1963).


Text from: collections.mfa.org/objects/39416/meg-merrilies

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