LizzieSiddal.com

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This site is a project of love, but it is not my project alone. I must express my gratitude to all of the visitors who have sent me images, articles, and thought provoking comments that have added so much to LizzieSiddal.com

LizzieSiddal.com

 

Blog/Latest Updates

New: Rossetti’s Hamlet and Ophelia, larger images of Study for Delia, Photo of Lizzie, Portrait of Lizzie by DGR, The First Madness of Ophelia, and Lizzie’s last pose

 Lucinda Hawksley interviewInterview with Lucinda Hawksley, author of Lizzie Siddal: Tragedy of a Pre-Raphaelite Supermodel

Poetry

Elizabeth Siddal’s Art

Letters written by Elizabeth Siddal

Letters and passages written by those who knew Lizzie

Drawer full of Guggums: Rossetti’s drawings of Lizzie

Handwriting analysis of Lizzie and Gabriel (.PDF File)

Lizzie and Gabriel’s Marriage Certificate

photographs of Elizabeth Siddal's grave in Highgate Cemetery

Photographs of Lizzie’s Grave

Inquest

Video Tribute

Lizzie and Tennyson

danits-amor-detail

Discussions:

Beata Beatrix part Ipart II

Lizzie as Ophelia

Description of Lizzie’s experience posing as Ophelia (written by the son of Millais)

A few images of Lizzie

Answering Questions: Lizzie’s Death

Visitor Submissions:

(Book Review) Lizzie Siddal: Tragedy of a Pre-Raphaelite Supermodel

Elizabeth Siddal: Creator and Created by Adele Uphause

Comment on the PRB and our modern culture

Comment: Early days in Surrey

 

Elizabeth Siddal (July 25, 1829 - February 11, 1862)

While working in a millinery shop, Lizzie was discovered by the artist Walter Deverell who painted her as Viola in his depiction of Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night. Lizzie went on to model for other Pre-Raphaelite artists and is most commonly recognized as Ophelia in the painting by John Everett Millais. But it was the charismatic Dante Gabriel Rossetti who not only drew and painted her obsessively, but encouraged Lizzie in her own artwork and poetry. Their relationship was intense and rocky, with an engagement that lasted a LizzieSiddal.comdecade. Sadly, their marriage was short. The couple suffered a stillborn child and Lizzie was seriously addicted to Laudanum. She died in 1862 due to an overdose. The rest of Lizzie’s tale is eerily famous for its gothic Victorian morbidity: Rossetti, in his grief, buried his only manuscript of his poems with Lizzie. The poems, nestled in her coffin amidst her famous red hair, haunted him. Seven years later, he had her coffin exhumed in order to retrieve the poems for publication. The story was spread that Lizzie was still in beautiful, pristine condition and that her flaming hair had continued to grow after death, filling the coffin. This, of course, is a biological impossibility. Cellular growth does not occur after death, but the tale has added to Lizzie’s legend and continues to capture the interest of Pre-Raphaelite and Lizzie Siddal enthusiasts.

Self Portrait of Elizabeth Siddal

Self portrait of Elizabeth Siddal See more of her art

Drawing of Lizzie by Gabriel

Drawing of Elizabeth Siddal by Dante Gabriel Rossetti. See more of Gabriel’s drawings of Lizzie

I started this website six years ago because, at the time, there was not much information about Elizabeth Siddal to be found online. What little there was mainly focused on the legends now firmly attached to her name:  forever an Ophelia, doomed to be the subject of morbid curiosity because the story of her death and exhumation have grown in the telling. I am by no means a scholar and I doubt this site holds any academic importance whatsoever. My goal is to look at Lizzie as the woman she was. She is far too often discussed only in the shadow of Rossetti -- her artwork is compared to his, her poetry described as derivative. And I do understand that it is impossible to talk about Lzzie without mentioning Gabriel as he was an important part of her life. But I think that there was a definite independenlizzie-rossetti-ophelia-detailt streak in Lizzie. The fact that she was so dedicated to art that she posed in the cold water for Millais without saying a word is testament to the fact that she took her role seriously in the creation of Ophelia. That, coupled with the fact that she was not content to be merely a model and embarked on her own career in art, shows us that Lizzie had a desire and a passion to create in an age where women weren’t even allowed many basic rights. Lizzie and Gabriel were both flawed. I hope that I do not idealize them too much here, my main goal is to facilitate discussion and to connect with those who have an appreciation for both Elizabeth Siddal and Pre-Raphaelite Art.

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Please visit my other blog, Pre-Raphaelite Sisterhood. Contact me at stephaniepina@lizziesiddal.com

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Drawing of Elizabeth Siddal by Dante Gabriel Rossetti

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