Collection Online

Apollo and Daphne
(1895)

Medium
oil on canvas

Measurements
168.2 × 199.0 cm

Credit Line
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
Purchased with funds donated by Krystyna Campbell-Pretty AM and Family, Warren Clark Bequest, E. & D. Rogowski Foundation, Louis Partos Bequest, and Marnie and Trevor Holborow, 2025

Gallery location
19th Century European Paintings Gallery
Level 2, NGV International

 

About this work

Trained at London’s Royal Academy of Arts under Lawrence Alma-Tadema, Henrietta Rae began exhibiting at the Royal Academy herself in 1881 and developed a reputation as a highly accomplished painter of Classical and allegorical subjects, frequently rendered on a large scale. In 1890 Rae travelled to Paris with her husband, fellow painter Ernest Normand, to further her studies under the French Academic master Jules Lefebvre at the Académie Julian. She returned to London with a new sense of purpose, enabling her to withstand the frequent criticisms of her work delivered by male painter rivals such as Frederic Leighton and John Millais – which may have been in response to her strong support of feminist causes and women’s suffrage. Apollo and Daphne, a tour-de-force mythological set piece, was Rae’s contribution to the Royal Academy exhibition of 1895.

Artwork Details

Place/s of Execution
London, England

Inscription
inscribed in black paint l.r.: H Rae

Accession Number
2025.3

Department
International Painting