
Ceres in search of Proserpine
David Wilkie·1803
Historical Context
David Wilkie painted this classical subject at age eighteen while studying at the Trustees' Academy in Edinburgh under John Graham. The scene of Ceres searching for her abducted daughter Proserpine drew on Ovid's Metamorphoses, a standard subject for academic training. This early work, now in Auckland, predates the Scottish genre scenes that would make Wilkie famous. David Wilkie, the son of a Scottish minister who became the most celebrated genre painter in early nineteenth-century Britain, combined the observation of Scottish social life with a technical command of the Dutch and Flemish genre tradition that made his work accessible to both popular and critical audiences. His rapid rise from provincial obscurity to national celebrity following the success of Village Politicians in 1806 was one of the most dramatic artistic careers of the Regency period. His influence on subsequent British painting — on Mulready, on the young Pre-Raphaelites who admired his technical precision — was foundational, establishing the tradition of narrative genre painting that would dominate Victorian exhibition culture.
Technical Analysis
The composition reveals a young artist grappling with the grand manner tradition, with broad handling of the landscape and somewhat stiff figural poses characteristic of student work in the Neoclassical mode.
_-_Sketch_of_a_Head_for_'The_Rabbit_on_the_Wall'_-_FA.231(O)_-_Victoria_and_Albert_Museum.jpg&width=400)
_-_The_Broken_Jar_-_FA.225(O)_-_Victoria_and_Albert_Museum.jpg&width=400)
_-_The_Refusal_-_FA.226(O)_-_Victoria_and_Albert_Museum.jpg&width=400)
_-_The_Daughters_of_Sir_Walter_Scott_-_FA.230(O)_-_Victoria_and_Albert_Museum.jpg&width=400)



