PRIVATE COLLECTION
Study for the Marriage at Cana, circa 1923
Framed (ref: 1132)
Oil, wash and pencil on paper
Tags: Winifred Knights drawing oil 1.Master Drawings 2.Knights Monnington Italy 49 pictures Rediscovering Women Artist Works for Paris
Oil, wash and pencil on paper
Tags: Winifred Knights drawing oil 1.Master Drawings 2.Knights Monnington Italy 49 pictures Rediscovering Women Artist Works for Paris
Provenance: John Monnington up to 1996; Private collection; David Thomson 2000
Exhibited: Winifred Knights, Dulwich Picture Gallery, 2016, curated by Sacha Llewellyn
Literature: Sacha Llewellyn Winifred Knights 1899-1947 (London: Lund Humphries in association with Dulwich Picture Gallery, 2016); Winifred Knights 1899-1947 (exh. Catalogue The Fine Art Society PLC and Liss Fine Art in Association with the British School at Rome 1995, p. 53)
The 'Marriage at Cana', started in 1922, is the principal painting produced by Knights during her time at the British School at Rome.
It depicts the miracle of the water turned into wine, (related in John 2:1-12). The setting for the painting is the Borghese Gardens adjoining the British School at Rome. The setting is also reminiscent of the background devised by Piero delta Francesca for the fresco of 'The Adoration of the True Cross' in the Church of S.Francesco in Arezzo, visited by Knights prior to starting work on her own composition.
The artist includes herself among the guests, along side, in the earliest studies, Arnold Mason. Tom Monnington, who did not arrive at the British School at Rome until 1923, is included in later studies at the far end of the table, in effect next to Mason. As known rivals over Knights they clearly made an ill-suited pair for a marriage feast and Mason is subsequently omitted from the final composition.
The existence of numerous pencil, watercolour and oil studies demonstrate the meticulous thought and care that Knights put into the conception of this painting. In 1922 she wrote to her mother: 'I have drawn 11 plates of melon, pink melon, 9 glasses of wine some empty, because they have run out, and 38 people.'