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Henry Fuseli
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Henry Fuseli RA (/ˈfjuːzəli, fjuːˈzɛli/ FEW-zə-lee, few-ZEL-ee;[1][2][3] German: Johann Heinrich Füssli [ˈjoːhan ˈhaɪ̯nʁɪç ˈfyːsli]; 7 February 1741 – 17 April 1825) was a Swiss painter, draughtsman, and writer on art who spent much of his life in Britain.
Key Information
Many of his successful works depict supernatural experiences, such as The Nightmare. He produced painted works for John Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery and his own "Milton Gallery". He held the posts of Professor of Painting and Keeper at the Royal Academy. His style had a considerable influence on many younger British artists, including William Blake.
Biography
[edit]
Fuseli was born on 7 February 1741 in Zürich, the second of 18 children.[4] Among his brothers and sisters were Johann Kaspar and Anna. His father was Johann Caspar Füssli, a painter of portraits and landscapes, and author of Lives of the Helvetic Painters. He intended Henry for the church, and sent him to the Caroline college of Zürich, where he received a classical education.[5] One of his schoolmates there was Johann Kaspar Lavater, with whom he became close friends.
After taking orders in 1761, Fuseli was forced to leave the country as a result of having helped Lavater to expose an unjust magistrate, whose powerful family sought revenge. He travelled through Germany, and then, in 1765, visited England, where he supported himself for some time by miscellaneous writing. Eventually, he became acquainted with Sir Joshua Reynolds, to whom he showed his drawings. Following Reynolds' advice, he decided to devote himself entirely to art. In 1770, he made an art pilgrimage to Italy, where he remained until 1778, changing his name from Füssli to the more Italian-sounding Fuseli.[4] In Rome, he moved in the same circles as the Scottish artist Alexander Runciman and the Swedish sculptor Tobias Sergel.[6]
In early 1779, he returned to Britain, visiting Zürich on the way. In London, he found a commission awaiting him from Alderman John Boydell, who was then setting up his Shakespeare Gallery. Fuseli painted a number of pieces for Boydell,[7] and supervised the first English edition of Lavater's work on physiognomy.[8][9] He also gave William Cowper some valuable assistance in preparing a translation of Homer. In 1788, Fuseli married Sophia Rawlins (originally one of his models), and he soon after became an associate of the Royal Academy.[4] The early feminist Mary Wollstonecraft, whose portrait he had painted, planned a trip with him to Paris, and pursued him determinedly, but communication between the two was stopped by Rawlins. Fuseli later said, "I hate clever women. They are only troublesome".[10] In 1790, he became a full academician, presenting Thor Battering the Midgard Serpent as his diploma work.[11] In 1799, Fuseli was appointed professor of painting to the Academy. Four years later, he was chosen as Keeper and resigned his professorship, but resumed it in 1810, continuing to hold both offices until his death.[4] He was succeeded as keeper by Henry Thomson.
In 1799, Fuseli exhibited a series of paintings from subjects furnished by the works of John Milton, with a view to forming a Milton gallery comparable to Boydell's Shakespeare gallery. There were 47 Milton paintings, many of them very large, completed at intervals over nine years. The exhibition proved a commercial failure and closed in 1800. In 1805 he brought out an edition of Matthew Pilkington's Lives of the Painters, which did little for his reputation.[4][further explanation needed]
Antonio Canova, when on his visit to England, was much taken with Fuseli's works, and on returning to Rome in 1817, caused him to be elected a member of the first class in the Accademia di San Luca.[4]
Works
[edit]As a painter, Fuseli favoured the supernatural. He pitched everything on an ideal scale, believing a certain amount of exaggeration was necessary in the higher branches of historical painting. In this theory, he was confirmed by the study of Michelangelo's works and the marble statues of the Monte Cavallo,[4][12] which, when at Rome, he liked to contemplate in the evening, relieved against a murky sky or illuminated by lightning.[4]
Describing his style, William Michael Rossetti in the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition said that:
His figures are full of life and earnestness, and seem to have an object in view which they follow with intensity. Like Rubens, he excelled in the art of setting his figures in motion. Though the lofty and terrible was his proper sphere, Fuseli had a fine perception of the ludicrous. The grotesque humour of his fairy scenes, especially those taken from A Midsummer-Night's Dream, is in its way not less remarkable than the poetic power of his more ambitious works.[4]
Though not noted as a colourist,[4] Fuseli was described as a master of light and shadow.[13] Rather than setting out his palette methodically in the manner of most painters, he merely distributed the colours across it randomly. He often used his pigments in the form of a dry powder, which he hastily combined on the end of his brush with oil, or turpentine, or gold size, regardless of the quantity, and depending on accident for the general effect. This recklessness may perhaps be explained by the fact that he did not paint in oil until the age of 25.[4]

Fuseli painted more than 200 pictures, but he exhibited only a small number of them. His earliest painting represented Joseph Interpreting the Dreams of the Baker and Butler, but the first to excite particular attention was The Nightmare, exhibited in 1782, a painting of which he painted several versions.[4] Themes seen in The Nightmare, such as horror, dark magic and sexuality, were echoed in his 1796 painting, Night-Hag visiting the Lapland Witches.[14]
His sketches or designs numbered about 800; they have admirable qualities of invention and design and are frequently superior to his paintings. In his drawings, as in his paintings, his methods included deliberately exaggerating the proportions of the human body and throwing his figures into contorted attitudes. One technique involved setting down arbitrary points on a sheet, which then became the extreme points of the various limbs.[4] Notable examples of these drawings were made in concert with George Richmond when the two artists were together in Rome.[15] He rarely drew figures from life, basing his art on study of the antique and Michelangelo.
He produced no landscapes—"Damn Nature! she always puts me out" was his characteristic exclamation—and painted only two portraits.[4] However, similar to contemporary landscape painters such as J. M. W. Turner, he evoked qualities of terror and the sublime.
Many interesting anecdotes of Fuseli, and his relations to contemporary artists, are given in his Life by John Knowles (1831).[4] He influenced the art of Fortunato Duranti.
Writings
[edit]
He was a thorough master of French, Italian, English and German, and could write in all these languages with equal facility and vigour, although he preferred German as the vehicle of his thoughts. His principal written work was his series of twelve lectures delivered to the Royal Academy, begun in 1801.[4]
Influence
[edit]His pupils included David Wilkie, Benjamin Haydon, William Etty, and Edwin Landseer.[16] William Blake was also inspired by him.[17][18]
Death
[edit]After a life of uninterrupted good health,[4] he died on 17 April 1825, at the house of the Countess of Guildford on Putney Hill,[19] aged 84, and was buried in the crypt of St Paul's Cathedral.[20] He was comparatively wealthy at the time of his death.[4]
Gallery
[edit]-
Anna Magdalena Schweizer, 1779
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The artist in conversation with Johann Jakob Bodmer, 1778–1781
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The death of Achilles, 1780
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The two murderers of the Duke of Clarence, 1780–1782
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Titania and Bottom, c. 1790
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Falstaff in the laundry basket, 1792
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The Creation of Eve from Milton's Paradise Lost, 1793
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Macbeth consulting the Vision of the Armed Head, 1793
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The daughters of Pandareus, c. 1795
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Odysseus in front of Scylla and Charybdis, 1794–1796
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The Night-Hag visiting the Lapland Witches, 1796
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Horseman attacked by a giant snake, c. 1800
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Ariel, c. 1800–1810
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Romeo stabs Paris at the bier of Juliet, c. 1809
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Lady Macbeth Seizing the Daggers, 1810–1812
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Puck, or Robin Goodfellow, c. 1810–1820
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Fairy Mab, 1815–1820
Films
[edit]- Passion and Obsession: Henry Fuseli, 1741–1825: painter and writer by Gaudenz Meili and David H. Weinglass, Zurich 1997
Books
[edit]- Creator of Nightmares: Henry Fuseli's Art and Life by Christopher Baker, Reaktion Books, 2024
See also
[edit]- Füssli, Johann Caspar (1706–1782), Swiss portrait painter (father of Henry Fuseli)
- Füssli, Johann Kaspar (1743–1786), Swiss entomologist (brother of Henry Fuseli)
References and sources
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Fuseli". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). HarperCollins. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
- ^ "Fuseli". Collins English Dictionary. HarperCollins. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
- ^ "Fuseli, Henry". Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 25 September 2020.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Rossetti, William Michael (1911). "Fuseli, Henry". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 11 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 368.
- ^ Henry Fuseli at The National Gallery of Art
- ^ Macmillan, Duncan (2023), Scotland and the Origins of Modern Art, Lund Humphries, London, pp. 65–71, ISBN 978-1-84822-633-3
- ^ Henry Fuseli at The National Gallery of Art
- ^ LAVATER, John Caspar. Essays on Physiognomy, designed to promote the Knowledge and Love of Mankind. Translated by Henry Hunter, D. D. Lond. 1789-98, royal 4to. In 41 nos. forming 5 vols. "A sumptuous Edition, executed by, and under the inspection of, Thomas Holloway. The translation and engravings were under the superintendence of the celebrated H. Fuseli, R.A., at whose solicitation Lavater furnished an entire fresh set of Drawings in quarto, to suite the prevailing taste of the public, it having been originally intended for folio size. The Engravings were executed by Thos. Holloway, Bartolozzi, Wm. Blake, and other eminent artists. […]" In: The bibliographer's manual of English literature by William Thomas Lowndes volume 5
- ^ Advertisement [by Henry Fuseli]. In: Essays on physiognomy; designed to promote the knowledge and the love of mankind. London: 1789-1798 (first edition). pp. [III-VIII]. Weblink: Wellcome Collection.
- ^ Myrone, Martin (2001) Henry Fuseli. London: Tate Gallery Publishing, p. 53. ISBN 1854373579
- ^ Thor battering the Midgard Serpent, 1790. Royal Academy of Arts Collections, 5 February 2014. Retrieved 5 February 2014. Archived here.
- ^ Papal Palace on Monte Cavallo, Rome. Retrieved 28 December 2011.
- ^ Leslie, C. R. (1855). Tom Taylor (ed.). Autobiographical Recollections (Letter to Miss Leslie December 1816). Boston: Ticknor & Fields.
- ^ "The Night-Hag Visiting Lapland Witches". The Met. Retrieved 12 November 2019.
- ^ "Fuseli, Henry", Benezit Dictionary of Artists, Oxford University Press, 31 October 2011, doi:10.1093/benz/9780199773787.article.b00069309
- ^ Keay, Carolyn (1974). Henry Fuseli. London: Academy Editions. p. 7.
- ^ Tomory, Peter A. (1972). The Life and Art of Henry Fuseli. New York: Praeger. p 211.
- ^ Schiff, Gert (1975). Henry Fuseli 1741–1825: [Essay Catalogue Entries and Biographical Outline]. London: Tate Gallery Publications. p. 14. ISBN 9780900874888.
- ^ "Putney | Old and New London: Volume 6 (pp. 489–503)". British-history.ac.uk. 22 June 2003. Retrieved 14 May 2012.
- ^ "Memorials of St Paul's Cathedral" Sinclair, W. p. 465: London; Chapman & Hall, Ltd; 1909.
Sources
[edit]- "Johann Heinrich Füssli". SIKART Lexicon on art in Switzerland.
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Rossetti, William Michael (1911). "Fuseli, Henry". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 11 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 368.
Further reading
[edit]- Calè, Luisa. Fuseli's Milton Gallery: 'Turning readers into spectators'. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2006.
- Hammelmann, Hans (1957). "Eighteenth-Century English Illustrators: Henry Fuseli, R.A.," The Book Collector 6 No.4 (winter): 350–363.
- Lentzsch, Franziska, et al. Fuseli: The Wild Swiss. Zürich: Scheidegger & Spiess, 2005.
- Myrone, Martin. Gothic Nightmares: Fuseli, Blake and the Romantic Imagination. London: Tate Publishing, 2006.
- Andrei Pop. Antiquity, Theatre, and the Painting of Henry Fuseli. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015.
- Powell, Nicolas. Fuseli: The Nightmare. London: Allen Lane, 1973.
- Pressly, Nancy L. The Fuseli Circle in Rome: Early Romantic Art of the 1770s. New Haven: Yale Center for British Art, 1979.
- Weinglass, David H. Henry Fuseli and the Engraver's Art. Boston: World Wide Books, 1982.
External links
[edit]| External videos | |
|---|---|
- Works by Henry Fuseli at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Henry Fuseli at the Internet Archive
- Works by Henry Fuseli at Open Library
- Profile on Royal Academy of Arts Collections
- Fuseli's Lecture on Painting 1801
- Petri Liukkonen. "Henry Fuseli". Books and Writers.
- 31 artworks by or after Henry Fuseli at the Art UK site
Henry Fuseli
View on GrokipediaEarly Life
Birth and Family
Henry Fuseli, originally named Johann Heinrich Füssli, was born on February 6, 1741, in Zürich, Switzerland, into a middle-class Protestant family rooted in the city's Reformed tradition.[2][3] As the second of eighteen children born to Johann Caspar Füssli and Anna Elisabeth Waser, only five siblings survived to adulthood, including an older brother, Rudolf Füssli.[3] The family's adherence to Zwinglian principles, emphasizing moral and intellectual rigor, shaped their daily life amid Zürich's post-Reformation cultural landscape.[4] Fuseli's father, Johann Caspar Füssli (1706–1782), was a prominent portrait painter, art writer, and collector who later served as a city clerk; he played a pivotal role in introducing his son to classical art and literature through his own works and extensive library.[3][2] Johann Caspar's writings on Swiss artists and his collection of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century works fostered an environment rich in artistic discourse, encouraging young Heinrich's early fascination with drawing and historical narratives.[5] The Fuseli household was a hub of intellectual activity, influenced by Enlightenment ideals circulating in Zürich, where family discussions often revolved around theology, literature, and aesthetics.[2] This setting provided Fuseli with initial exposure to the local artistic scene through his father's connections to fellow painters and scholars, embedding him in a community that valued both religious piety and creative expression within the Zwinglian reformist framework.[3][6]Education in Switzerland
Fuseli entered the Collegium Carolinum in Zurich around 1756 at the age of fifteen, where he pursued a classical education emphasizing theology in preparation for a clerical career as envisioned by his father. Under the guidance of professors Johann Jakob Bodmer and Johann Jakob Breitinger, he studied literature, aesthetics, Greek, and Latin, forming a close intellectual bond with fellow student Johann Kaspar Lavater, who became a lifelong friend and collaborator.[3][7] This period immersed Fuseli in humanist scholarship, including early familiarity with epic works by Homer and Shakespeare, which later influenced his artistic themes.[8] In 1761, Fuseli was ordained as a Zwinglian minister alongside Lavater, marking the culmination of his theological training.[7] He briefly preached in Zurich, adopting an innovative oratorical style inspired by figures such as Saurin, Klopstock, and Bodmer, though his efforts achieved only modest popularity among congregations.[7] Soon after, disillusionment set in; Fuseli grew increasingly skeptical of clerical life and its constraints, prompting a gradual shift away from religious pursuits toward broader intellectual and creative endeavors.[7] Parallel to his formal studies, Fuseli developed his artistic abilities through self-directed practice, secretly sketching while others read aloud—a habit that fostered his ambidexterity—and copying prints from his father's collection of works after Michelangelo and other masters.[7] This familial artistic environment, rooted in his father's profession as a painter and writer, provided an initial foundation for his drawing skills without structured instruction.[7] Fuseli's time in Zurich culminated in political activism; in 1762, he and Lavater anonymously published a critical letter and pamphlet satirizing Zurich magistrate Felix Grebel for corruption, which escalated into a formal arrest warrant issued against them in 1764.[7] This controversy forced Fuseli's hasty departure from Switzerland, ending his early academic and ministerial phase and redirecting his path toward art abroad.[7]Career in Britain
Arrival and Early Recognition
In 1764, at the age of 23, Heinrich Füssli fled Zürich due to political entanglements stemming from a satirical publication criticizing a local magistrate, alongside his friend Johann Caspar Lavater; after a brief stay in Berlin, he arrived in London and anglicized his name to Henry Fuseli.[9] Upon settling in England, Fuseli supported himself as a translator of German, French, and Italian texts for booksellers and merchants, marking his initial foray into literary work that would later intersect with his artistic pursuits.[1] His first major translation was Johann Joachim Winckelmann's Reflections on the Painting and Sculpture of the Greeks in 1765, a work that introduced neoclassical ideals to English audiences and demonstrated his emerging scholarly engagement with art theory.[10] Fuseli's early artistic ambitions gained traction through encounters with prominent figures in London's cultural scene, including Sir Joshua Reynolds, whom he met around 1768; Reynolds praised Fuseli's drawings and translations, encouraging him to abandon theology and pursue painting professionally.[2] This recognition was exemplified by Fuseli's first major oil painting, Joseph Interpreting the Dreams of the Baker and Butler (c. 1768–1770), a history painting that showcased his nascent dramatic style through biblical narrative and expressive figures; the work, purchased by the publisher Joseph Johnson, highlighted his interest in psychological intensity and moral themes, earning notice among patrons.[11][12] Despite these successes, Fuseli endured a period of financial hardship in the late 1760s, supplementing his income through odd jobs such as tutoring languages and contributing to periodicals, while producing portraits and small-scale history paintings for private patrons.[2] These early commissions, often depicting literary or mythological subjects with bold contrasts and emotional vigor, began to establish his reputation for a theatrical approach in the British art world, distinct from the prevailing portraiture dominance.[4] In 1770, support from patrons including the banker Thomas Coutts enabled a pivotal trip to Italy, where Fuseli would refine his techniques over the next eight years, but his pre-departure efforts had already laid the groundwork for his emerging prominence.[2]Royal Academy Involvement
Fuseli was elected an Associate of the Royal Academy (ARA) on 3 November 1788 and advanced to full Academician (RA) on 10 February 1790, submitting Thor Battering the Midgard Serpent as his diploma work, a dramatic depiction of the Norse god in combat with the world-encircling serpent.[2] This recognition solidified his position within London's artistic establishment, following earlier exhibitions that had garnered attention for his bold, imaginative style.[2] In 1799, Fuseli was appointed Professor of Painting at the Royal Academy Schools, a role he held until 1805, during which he delivered annual lectures exploring the principles of invention, expression, and the history of art, often emphasizing the power of imagination over strict adherence to classical imitation in a subtle critique of prevailing neoclassical conventions.[2] Upon his election as Keeper of the Royal Academy Schools in 1804—a position overseeing student education, collections management, and administrative operations amid the disruptions of the Napoleonic era—he resigned the professorship to avoid conflicting duties, though he was reappointed to it in 1810 while retaining the Keepership until his death in 1825.[2] As Keeper, Fuseli guided a generation of artists, including John Constable and J.M.W. Turner, through rigorous training focused on drawing and historical subjects, enforcing high standards by critiquing student works.[2] Fuseli's tenure was marked by internal conflicts, particularly with fellow Academician James Barry, whose rigid neoclassical views and administrative criticisms clashed with Fuseli's advocacy for expressive freedom, contributing to Barry's expulsion from the Academy in 1799 and Fuseli's own temporary withdrawal from professorial duties in 1805 amid broader institutional tensions.[13] As a senior member, he participated in selecting and hanging works for the annual exhibitions, influencing which pieces gained public visibility and shaping the Academy's direction toward more dynamic interpretations of history painting.[2]Artistic Style and Themes
Influences and Development
Fuseli's artistic development underwent a transformative phase during his sojourn in Italy from 1770 to 1778, centered in Rome, where he devoted himself to studying Michelangelo's frescoes in the Sistine Chapel and the antique sculptures of Greek and Roman antiquity. This immersion led to a pivotal shift in his style, departing from the balanced proportions and restraint of neoclassicism toward robust, muscular figures and dynamic compositions marked by intense chiaroscuro and expressive foreshortening derived from Michelangelo's influence and Mannerist techniques.[1][9][14] Parallel to these visual sources, Fuseli's work was deeply informed by literary inspirations, including his profound engagement with Shakespeare, Milton, and Homer, which appeared in early sketches as he explored dramatic narratives and heroic ideals. He also admired the classical composure of Nicholas Poussin and the wild, grandiose conceptions of Salvator Rosa, whose contrasting approaches to form and emotion enriched Fuseli's own synthesis of order and tumult in his compositions.[1][15] Following his return to Britain in 1779, Fuseli's style evolved in the 1780s from monumental history paintings grounded in classical and literary subjects to bolder explorations of the supernatural, integrating Gothic motifs of dread and the uncanny to heighten emotional intensity. This progression reflected his ambition to elevate history painting through fantastical and irrational elements drawn from his Italian experiences and literary passions.[1][16] Additionally, the physiognomic theories of his Swiss mentor and lifelong friend Johann Caspar Lavater exerted a lasting impact on Fuseli's portrayal of character, emphasizing how facial features and bodily expressions revealed inner temperament and moral states. Fuseli illustrated Lavater's Physiognomische Fragmente (1775–1778) and supervised its English translation in 1789, applying these principles to depict heightened emotions and psychological depth in his figures, often contrasting delicate and demonic physiognomies to underscore narrative tension.[17][18]Key Motifs and Symbolism
Henry Fuseli's oeuvre embodies a proto-Romantic vision that prioritizes the irrational, the emotional, and the fantastical, setting it apart from neoclassical restraint and anticipating the intensity of later Romanticism. His works recurrently explore the psyche's darker recesses through symbolic elements that blend horror, desire, and mythic grandeur, creating compositions that unsettle viewers and probe the sublime. This approach reflects his engagement with emerging sensibilities of subjectivity and the irrational, as analyzed in scholarly examinations of his contributions to Gothic and Romantic aesthetics.[19][1] Central to Fuseli's motifs are supernatural and nightmarish elements, including incubi, ghosts, and charged erotic tension, rendered via distorted figures and dream-like, ambiguous compositions that blur the line between waking reality and subconscious terror. These motifs draw from Gothic horror traditions, evoking a sense of pervasive unease and the uncanny, where the supernatural intrudes upon the human realm to symbolize repressed fears and desires.[16][19] Such imagery underscores his fascination with the irrational mind, positioning his art as a visual counterpart to the psychological explorations in contemporary literature.[1] Fuseli's treatment of gender dynamics frequently subverts conventional hierarchies, depicting powerful, amazonian women inspired by mythology—such as figures evoking Titans or Valkyries—alongside vulnerable, often passive males, to explore themes of dominance, submission, and erotic power reversal. These portrayals challenge patriarchal norms by empowering female figures as agents of disruption or seduction, while males appear ensnared or overwhelmed, reflecting broader cultural anxieties about sexuality and authority in the late Enlightenment era.[20][16] This symbolic inversion serves as a critique of gender roles, infused with sadomasochistic undertones that heighten the emotional stakes of his narratives.[20] To amplify these themes, Fuseli masterfully utilized chiaroscuro—sharp contrasts of light and shadow—to heighten drama and psychological depth, alongside exaggerated anatomy that distorts proportions for expressive effect, conveying raw passion, terror, and the sublime. His anatomical exaggerations, influenced briefly by Michelangelo's studies during his time in Rome, emphasize muscular tension and ethereal forms to evoke visceral responses.[1][19] This stylistic toolkit aligns with the Sturm und Drang movement's emphasis on stormy emotionality and individual turmoil, which Fuseli encountered through his literary and artistic networks.[1] Fuseli's symbolism is deeply intertwined with literature, particularly Shakespearean tragedy, where he visualized concepts like inexorable fate through motifs of stormy skies, chained figures, and turbulent atmospheres that mirror human strife and cosmic disorder. These elements transform literary abstraction into tangible visual allegory, with chained forms symbolizing entrapment by destiny and roiling skies representing chaotic passions.[16][19] By integrating such symbols, Fuseli elevated painting beyond mere illustration, using them to philosophically personify sentiment and the intuitive grasp of profound ideas.[16]Major Works
Paintings
Henry Fuseli's most iconic painting, The Nightmare (1781), is an oil on canvas measuring approximately 101.7 × 127.1 cm, depicting a woman in deep sleep with her arms thrown above her head, an incubus-like demon squatting on her chest, and a ghostly horse's head emerging from the shadows behind the bed.[21] The composition employs dramatic chiaroscuro lighting to evoke horror, sexuality, and the irrational forces of the unconscious, drawing on folklore of incubi and Gothic themes.[22] Exhibited at the Royal Academy in London in 1782, it provoked controversy for its bold eroticism and lack of moralizing narrative, titillating and shocking viewers while becoming a sensation that boosted Fuseli's fame.[22] Fuseli created at least three additional versions of the work between 1781 and the early 1800s, including one now in the Frankfurt Goethe Museum, with engravings by Thomas Burke in 1783 further disseminating its notoriety across Europe.[21][22] In the 1780s and 1790s, Fuseli contributed to John Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery project, a major endeavor to promote British art through illustrations of Shakespeare's plays, producing at least nine large-scale oil paintings that emphasized supernatural and dramatic elements.[2] One key work, Macbeth and the Witches (1790), portrays the three witches prophesying to Macbeth amid a stormy, ethereal landscape, capturing the play's themes of ambition and the occult with exaggerated gestures and shadowy figures.[23] Another significant piece, Lear Casting Out His Daughter Cordelia (c. 1785–1790), illustrates the opening scene of King Lear where the aging king banishes his faithful daughter, rendered in oil with intense emotional turmoil, dynamic poses, and a focus on familial tragedy.[24] These paintings were displayed in the gallery from 1789 onward and later engraved for Boydell's folio publications, influencing public interpretations of Shakespeare through visual drama.[25] Fuseli's mythological paintings often fused classical subjects with heightened emotional intensity, as seen in The Apotheosis of Penelope Boothby (1792–1794), an oil on canvas (213.5 × 121.5 cm) commissioned by Sir Brooke Boothby following the death of his five-year-old daughter Penelope in 1791.[26] The composition shows the child ascending to heaven in the arms of an angel, surrounded by cherubs and ethereal light, blending neoclassical elevation with personal grief to create a poignant memorial now held at Wolverhampton Art Gallery.[27] Similarly, Fuseli explored epic classical narratives in works like Titans Storming Mount Olympus (c. 1770–1772), an early oil study depicting the chaotic Titanomachy with towering, muscular figures clashing against divine order, infusing Greek mythology with dynamic energy and sublime scale.[28] Fuseli's ambitious Milton Gallery project (c. 1791–1799) consisted of 40 large oil paintings illustrating John Milton's Paradise Lost, exhibited at the Great Newport Street gallery in London from 1799 to 1800.[29] These works, ranging from scenes of Satan's rebellion to the Fall of Man, featured epic compositions with vivid colors, contorted figures, and infernal atmospheres, aiming to visualize Milton's blank verse through grand historical painting.[30] Despite critical praise for its imaginative scope, the project proved commercially unsuccessful, failing to attract sufficient subscribers for engravings and leading to the dispersal of the paintings.[29]Drawings and Illustrations
Fuseli's oeuvre includes over 800 surviving drawings, the majority functioning as preparatory studies for his larger paintings and demonstrating his mastery of graphic media. Executed primarily in ink, chalk, and watercolor, these works emphasize rapid, expressive lines that convey movement and psychological tension, often exploring dramatic poses derived from literary and mythological sources. Many such drawings were squared for transfer to canvas, highlighting Fuseli's methodical approach to composition despite their spontaneous appearance.[31][32] A significant portion of Fuseli's illustrative output contributed to major publications, notably his designs for John Boydell's ambitious 1802 edition of Shakespeare's dramatic works. Fuseli supplied numerous engravings based on his original compositions, including the whimsical "Oberon and Titania," which captures the fairy king and queen amid ethereal motifs of enchantment and mischief from A Midsummer Night's Dream. These illustrations, reproduced through etching and engraving by skilled printmakers, extended Fuseli's fascination with the supernatural to a wider audience, blending intricate detailing with bold contrasts to evoke Shakespeare's imaginative realms. Similarly, between 1775 and 1778, Fuseli provided outline illustrations for Johann Caspar Lavater's influential Essays on Physiognomy, depicting facial expressions and character types that were then engraved for the four-volume publication; these works underscore his early interest in the visual representation of human emotion and moral physiognomy.[33][2][34] Fuseli also created a series of self-portraits in drawing, which trace the evolution of his self-image from youthful introspection to mature authority, often rendered in chalk or graphite to highlight facial features and contemplative gazes. Examples include a melancholic profile study from around 1778–79, showing his head resting on his hand, and later variants that incorporate symbolic elements reflective of his artistic persona. In his later years, Fuseli produced numerous sketches focused on historical and literary subjects, experimenting with exaggerated anatomical forms to heighten dramatic effect—poses that echo the motifs of his earlier paintings but adapted for quick graphite or ink execution. These late drawings, preserved in major collections such as the British Museum, reveal his enduring versatility in graphic form, with studies of figures from classical history and epic narratives demonstrating refined yet innovative compositional explorations.[35][36][37]Writings and Art Theory
Published Projects
One of Henry Fuseli's early published projects was his translation of Johann Joachim Winckelmann's Gedanken über die Nachahmung der griechischen Werke in der Malerei und Bildhauerkunst (1755), rendered into English as Reflections on the Painting and Sculpture of the Greeks: With Instructions for the Connoisseur, and an Essay on Grace in Works of Art, published in London in 1765.[10] This work, sold by the translator through bookseller Andrew Millar, helped bridge German art theory with British practice during Fuseli's formative years in England and played a pivotal role in introducing Winckelmann's neoclassical aesthetics—emphasizing ideal beauty and the imitation of Greek models—to an English audience previously dominated by French and Italian influences.[10][38] Fuseli's most extensive collaborative publication effort came through his contributions to John Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery, a ambitious venture launched in 1786 to promote British history painting via illustrations of Shakespeare's plays.[2] Between 1786 and 1805, Fuseli supplied at least nine paintings for the gallery, including dramatic scenes such as Macbeth and the Witches (1793–1794) and Titania and Bottom (c. 1790), which were later engraved for Boydell's nine-volume illustrated edition of Shakespeare's works (1802).[2] These contributions, among over 160 paintings by various artists displayed in the Pall Mall gallery, integrated Fuseli's characteristic intensity and supernatural motifs into a national project aimed at elevating Shakespearean themes through visual art, though the enterprise ultimately faced financial challenges and closed in 1805.[39] In 1799, Fuseli independently launched the Milton Gallery at 113 Pall Mall, London, exhibiting 47 large-scale paintings inspired by John Milton's Paradise Lost and other works, completed over nearly a decade from 1791.[4] The gallery sought to visually interpret Milton's epic poetry for public education, transforming literary narrative into a sequence of dramatic tableaux that encouraged viewers to engage with the text through spectacle, much like Boydell's model. Despite critical interest, low attendance led to financial losses, and the exhibition closed after two years in 1801, with many paintings dispersed or sold.[4] Fuseli's fragmented writings on art, including aphorisms and notes, were compiled and published posthumously in 1831 as part of The Life and Writings of Henry Fuseli, edited by his student John Knowles.[3] This volume collected Fuseli's terse reflections on artistic genius, the dangers of mere imitation, and the sublime in creation, drawn from his unpublished manuscripts and offering insights into his theoretical views shaped by Enlightenment and Romantic ideas.[40] The aphorisms, often proverbial in style, underscored Fuseli's belief in originality as essential to great art, influencing later scholarship on his intellectual legacy.[41]Lectures and Criticism
As Professor of Painting at the Royal Academy from 1799 to 1805 and again from 1810 until his death in 1825, Henry Fuseli delivered over twenty annual lectures that formed a cornerstone of his critical output, emphasizing theoretical principles of art over technical instruction. These talks, often delivered to students and members, critiqued the works of major artists while advocating for an elevated approach to painting that prioritized intellectual depth and emotional intensity. Fuseli's lectures were published in installments, with the first three appearing in 1801 under the title Lectures on Painting, Delivered at the Royal Academy, dedicated to patron William Lock, and later translated into German, French, and Italian; additional lectures followed in 1820, bringing the total to twelve lectures, compiled and edited with notes by John Knowles.[7][42] A central theme in Fuseli's lectures was the contrast between Michelangelo and Raphael, whom he positioned as exemplars of divergent artistic ideals. He praised Michelangelo for embodying the sublime through grandeur of form and elemental power, as seen in the Sistine Chapel ceiling where "sublimity of conception, grandeur of form, and breadth of manner" rendered divine will intuitive, though he noted excesses influenced by the Tuscan school. In contrast, Raphael represented dramatic humanity and grace, excelling in pathos and symmetry in works like the Transfiguration, but lacking Michelangelo's profound depth in chiaroscuro and invention. This comparison underscored Fuseli's advocacy for the "grand style," defined as a synthesis of simplicity, unity, and epic elevation drawn from ancient Greek models, which he argued surpassed mere imitation by fostering intuitive genius over decorative excess.[43][7] Fuseli's essays and lectures further explored concepts of genius and the sublime, drawing on literary sources to elevate painting as a moral and intellectual pursuit. He extolled Shakespeare and Homer as pinnacles of imaginative power, with Shakespeare’s scenes of terror—such as Macbeth’s encounter with the witches—demanding artistic rendition through minimal machinery and maximal emotional force to capture passion's immediacy. Homer, similarly, inspired ideal forms, as in Zeuxis's synthesis of beauties for Achilles, which Fuseli used to illustrate genius as the intuitive discovery of new expressive materials. Dismissing Dutch realism, exemplified by Rembrandt's focus on detailed light and shade, as tame and spot-bound compared to the epic breadth of Titian or Poussin, Fuseli positioned these literary giants against prosaic imitation, arguing that true art must evoke awe through vast conception rather than literal transcription.[43][7] Influenced by Johann Joachim Winckelmann's emphasis on classical beauty—whose Reflections on the Painting and Sculpture of the Greeks Fuseli had translated in 1765—he adapted these ideas to champion British history painting as a vehicle for national grandeur. Yet Fuseli critiqued Winckelmann's narrow antiquarianism for constraining modern artists, urging instead a dynamic emulation that incorporated sublime passion to rival ancient ideals and promote the "grand style" in contemporary works. His views on the role of passion in creation, essential for authentic expression as in Aristides' shuddering figures or Raphael's maternal pathos, extended to controversial assertions about artistic temperament, implying that intense emotion—often tied to themes of desire and transgression—drove invention, though he referenced female literary figures like Alessandra Scala without direct commentary on women as practitioners. These positions ignited debates among Royal Academy peers, including clashes with critics like Rev. R. A. Bromley over interpretive excesses and disputes with scholars like Dr. Geddes on classical fidelity, with the Academy ultimately backing Fuseli's intellectual vigor.[43][7]Personal Life
Relationships and Marriage
Fuseli formed a long-term companionship with Sophia Rawlins, an amateur artist's model from Bath, whom he met around 1788 and married on July 30 of that year.[1] Over twenty years his junior, Rawlins became a central figure in his personal and artistic life, serving as his primary muse and posing for more than 150 portraits, studies, and erotic drawings that captured her elaborate hairstyles, fashionable attire, and provocative expressions.[1][44] Their marriage was marked by intense passion and mutual devotion, though childless, with Fuseli's depictions often blending tenderness and a fetishistic intensity focused on elements like hair and clothing.[1][44] Fuseli's personal connections extended to deep intellectual and artistic friendships, notably with William Blake, whom he met around 1780 through the publisher Joseph Johnson.[1] Sharing a fascination with the visionary and supernatural, the two artists enjoyed mutual admiration; Blake engraved several of Fuseli's works, including plates for his translation of Lavater's Aphorisms on Man (1788), and later reinterpreted Fuseli's iconic The Nightmare in his own prophetic poem Jerusalem.[2][1] Their correspondence and collaborations reflected a profound artistic kinship.[45] As Fuseli established himself in Britain, he cultivated key patron relationships that supported his career, including the banker Thomas Coutts, who funded his formative trip to Italy in 1770 and purchased numerous works throughout his life.[2] Coutts's financial backing, derived from his banking interests, provided Fuseli with stability amid fluctuating public reception of his art.[2] He also engaged with vibrant intellectual circles in London, frequenting the dinners of radical publisher Joseph Johnson, where he encountered thinkers like Mary Wollstonecraft.[1] Wollstonecraft, an early feminist and contributor to Johnson's Analytical Review alongside Fuseli, developed a strong platonic affection for him shortly after his marriage; she proposed joining the Fuselis in a ménage à trois, an idea firmly rejected by Sophia, though their exchanges influenced Wollstonecraft's writings on gender and emotion.[1][44] Fuseli's female figures in his paintings often drew from rumored or unconfirmed attractions to muses, such as his earlier unrequited passion for Anna Landolt, the niece of his friend Johann Caspar Lavater, in Zurich during his youth before emigrating in 1764, which her father thwarted and which may have inspired the idealized, tormented women in works like The Nightmare.[1] No confirmed extramarital affairs are documented, but these personal inspirations infused his art with emotional depth, blending desire and frustration without evidence of impropriety during his marriage.[1]Later Years and Retirement
In the later part of his career, Fuseli served as Keeper of the Schools from 1804 until his death in 1825, though he stepped back from some administrative responsibilities due to advancing age and health concerns. He had resumed his role as Professor of Painting in 1810, following a brief resignation in 1805 amid internal academy tensions, and continued in that capacity until his death, delivering lectures with diminishing vigor into early 1825. Despite the reduction in administrative duties, he maintained sporadic involvement by exhibiting works at the Royal Academy, including pieces prepared for the 1825 show, reflecting a gradual withdrawal from the institution's day-to-day operations.[2][7] Fuseli's health began to decline noticeably from around 1815, exacerbated by vision problems and gout that increasingly restricted his ability to paint. A nervous fever in 1813 had already prompted a restorative stay at Hastings, and by 1823, he endured a severe episode involving breathing difficulties and swollen legs, from which he partially recovered but never fully regained his strength. These ailments limited his productivity, leading him to depend more on the support of his wife, Sophia, with whom he had shared a devoted marriage since 1788, during his periods of illness.[7] Among his final artistic endeavors were illustrations for John Milton's Comus in the 1820s and a self-portrait completed in 1821, both of which convey a more introspective and subdued mood compared to his earlier dramatic compositions. These works, produced amid physical constraints, highlight Fuseli's enduring commitment to literary themes and personal reflection in his waning years. Fuseli enjoyed financial stability in his later life, secured by his Royal Academy pension—stemming from his professorial salary and keeper's emoluments—and income from occasional sales, such as the £300 earned from publishing his lectures in 1820. This allowed him a quiet existence with his family at their home in Putney Hill, London, free from earlier pecuniary pressures.[7]Legacy
Influence on Romanticism
Henry Fuseli's emphasis on intense emotion and the irrational profoundly shaped the visionary style of William Blake, who drew inspiration from Fuseli's dramatic compositions and supernatural motifs, such as the incubus and spectral figures in The Nightmare (1781), to infuse his own works like the Jerusalem series with apocalyptic fervor and psychological depth.[1] Fuseli's tenure as Professor of Painting at the Royal Academy Schools from 1799 to 1825 further disseminated these ideas, influencing Blake's rejection of classical restraint in favor of imaginative ecstasy.[2] Similarly, J.M.W. Turner's exploration of the sublime in landscapes echoed Fuseli's prioritization of emotional turmoil over rational composition, incorporating turbulent skies and ethereal visions that evoked awe and terror in paintings like Snow Storm: Hannibal and his Army Crossing the Alps (1812).[1] This shared focus on passion and the ineffable distinguished Romantic art from Neoclassical order, positioning Fuseli as a pivotal bridge to the movement's core tenets.[46] Fuseli played a key role in elevating history painting in Britain by expanding its scope beyond historical events to encompass literary and mythical narratives, thereby inspiring the Pre-Raphaelites' dramatic storytelling. His adaptations of Shakespearean and Miltonic scenes, such as Macbeth and the Armed Head (c. 1791), emphasized theatrical intensity and moral ambiguity, which resonated in Dante Gabriel Rossetti's medieval-inspired works like How They Met Themselves (1851–1854), where emotional narrative drives the composition.[1] Through his Royal Academy exhibitions and lectures, Fuseli advocated for history painting as a vehicle for national cultural expression, fostering a legacy that the Pre-Raphaelites revived in their rejection of academic conventions for vivid, emotive scenes.[2] Fuseli's promotion of Gothic and supernatural themes laid foundational groundwork for Victorian fantasy art and literary illustrations, introducing motifs of nightmarish dread and otherworldly enchantment that permeated 19th-century visual culture. Works like Fairy Mab (c. 1793), depicting the fairy queen and spectral figures from Milton's L'Allegro, anticipated the fairy paintings of Richard Dadd and the ethereal illustrations for Gothic novels by artists such as John Martin.[1][47] His The Nightmare became an icon of Gothic horror, influencing the macabre imagery in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818) and subsequent book illustrations that blended terror with the fantastic.[46] This thematic innovation encouraged Victorian artists to explore the irrational and mystical, bridging Romantic sublime with later genre developments.[48] Fuseli's art critiques and educational efforts emphasized Michelangelo's terribilità—the awe-inspiring power of expressive distortion—as a model for Romantic expression, influencing manifestos that championed emotional grandeur over formal perfection. In his Royal Academy lectures, Fuseli praised Michelangelo's dynamic figures for their capacity to evoke sublime terror, a concept that informed William Hazlitt's essays on art and the Romantic valorization of the "grand style."[49] This advocacy shaped British art pedagogy, encouraging artists to harness terribilità for psychological impact, as seen in the exaggerated gestures of Romantic history painters like Benjamin Robert Haydon.[8]Modern Exhibitions and Scholarship
In the 21st century, major retrospectives have revitalized interest in Fuseli's oeuvre, beginning with the 2005–2006 exhibition "Fuseli: The Wild Swiss" at Kunsthaus Zürich, which highlighted his Swiss heritage through over 150 works, including paintings, drawings, and prints that underscored his early influences from Zurich's Reformation-era culture and his evolution into a Romantic visionary.[50] This show traveled to Tate Britain as "Gothic Nightmares: Fuseli, Blake and the Romantic Imagination" in 2006, presenting around 180 items to contextualize Fuseli's supernatural themes alongside contemporaries like William Blake, emphasizing the Gothic's role in British art.[51] Subsequent exhibitions, such as the 2018 monographic display "Fuseli: Drama and Theatre" at Kunstmuseum Basel, featured nearly 70 paintings and drawings to explore his theatrical inspirations from Shakespeare and Milton, revealing how his dramatic compositions bridged literature and visual spectacle.[52] More recent shows have addressed interpretive gaps in Fuseli's representations of gender and identity, notably the 2022 Courtauld Gallery exhibition "Fuseli and the Modern Woman: Fashion, Fantasy, Fetishism," which drew on 51 drawings spanning his career to analyze his portrayals of women as figures of erotic allure, transgression, and psychological depth, often blending observed fashion with fantastical elements to critique 18th-century gender norms.[53] This feminist lens has extended to broader scholarship, including a 2022 study examining Fuseli's works alongside Blake and Thomas Banks in relation to evolving concepts of "self-evidence" and gendered sensibility in late Enlightenment art.[54] Post-2020 analyses have also illuminated underrepresented aspects, such as queerness, with Fuseli's paintings featured in the 2022 Wrightwood 659 exhibition "The First Homosexuals," where pieces like his incubus motifs were interpreted as prefiguring non-binary expressions of desire predating modern terminology.[55] Scholarship has increasingly noted anti-colonial undertones in Fuseli's mythological and literary subjects, particularly his 1806–1807 painting The Negro Avenged, which depicts a formerly enslaved figure's retribution and aligns with abolitionist sentiments in William Cowper's poetry, reflecting Fuseli's opposition to slavery amid Britain's imperial context.[2] These themes resonate in contemporary media, where Fuseli's nightmarish iconography—exemplified by The Nightmare (1781)—has influenced 2020s horror visuals, from sleep paralysis depictions in films like His House (2020) to digital art evoking Gothic dread, establishing his work as a foundational reference for exploring subconscious terror.[22] Fuseli's pieces remain central to major collections, with the Detroit Institute of Arts holding key works like The Nightmare (1781), Portrait of a Lady (late 18th century), and Roland at Roncesvalles (ca. 1800–1810), where ongoing conservation ensures the preservation of their dramatic chiaroscuro effects and symbolic details.[21] The Kunstmuseum Basel maintains significant holdings, including oils and drawings that informed its 2018 exhibition, supporting research into his Swiss-British synthesis.[56] Digital initiatives, such as the British Museum's online catalog of over 650 Fuseli drawings from his Roman Albums, have facilitated post-2020 access for scholars studying his preparatory sketches and their influence on Romantic expressionism.[37] Continuing interest is evident in exhibitions like "Gothic Returns: Fuseli to Fomison" at Auckland Art Gallery (September 2023–August 2025), which traces Fuseli's supernatural motifs through to 20th-century New Zealand art.[57]References
- https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Dictionary_of_National_Biography%2C_1885-1900/Fuseli%2C_Henry