
by John Everett Millais, 1850
John Everett Millais rendered this Christ in the House of His Parents in 1849-50, depicting the Holy Family in a working carpenter's shop. The young Jesus has cut his hand on a nail, blood dripping onto his foot and prefiguring the Crucifixion. Mary kneels in concern while Joseph examines the wound. A carpenter's triangle above Christ's head symbolizes the Trinity.
The painting caused a scandal at the 1850 Royal Academy exhibition. Critics attacked its realistic depiction of a humble workshop, including dirt on the floor. Charles Dickens savaged it in Household Words, calling the young Christ "a hideous, wry-necked, blubbering, red-headed boy." The Times called the painting "revolting."
Queen Victoria asked to view the painting privately at Buckingham Palace. Despite the hostility, John Ruskin defended the Pre-Raphaelite movement, and the controversy made the group famous. The painting hangs at Tate Britain in London, a landmark of Victorian art controversy.

John Everett Millais
Fitzwilliam Museum (University of Cambridge), Cambridge, Cambridge
Other masterpieces from the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood movement

William Holman Hunt, 1854
Keble College Chapel, Oxford

John William Waterhouse, 1896
Tate Britain, London

Dante Gabriel Rossetti, 1874
Tate Britain, London

Edward Burne-Jones, 1880
Tate Britain, London

John William Waterhouse, 1891
Tate Britain, London
John William Waterhouse, 1888
Tate Britain, London

Dante Gabriel Rossetti, 1870
Tate Britain, London

Edward Burne-Jones
Leighton House Museum, London, London
Luxury wall art with the same mood and energy. Gallery-quality canvas, no museum crowds.
Browse Collection