Penelope Boothby | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 13 March 1791 | (aged 5)
Nationality | British |
Occupation | Model |
Penelope Boothby (11 April 1785 – 13 March 1791) was a girl who has become one of the most famous child characters in British art. Her image inspired the paintings by Joshua Reynolds, Henry Fuseli, John Everett Millais, a sculpture by Thomas Banks, photographs of Lewis Carroll, sonnet of Brooke Boothby.[1]
According to art historians and historians, in the art of the 19th-20th centuries Penelope Boothby became a classic child of the Romantic era, the keeper of heavenly innocence, a symbol of “what we have lost and what we are afraid to lose.”[1] The image of Penelope was actively exploited by popular culture throughout the 20th century.[2]