Ophelia
0 sources
Ophelia is associated with the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood.[1]
Ophelia
Summary
Ophelia is a painting[1]. Ophelia ranks in the top 0.4% of painting entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (4,820 views/month, #24 of 5,957).[2]
Key Facts
- Ophelia is the creator of John Everett Millais[3].
- Ophelia is located in City of Westminster[4].
- Ophelia is in the country of United Kingdom[5].
- Ophelia's instance of is recorded as painting[6].
- Ophelia is owned by Tate Britain[7].
- Ophelia is owned by Tate[8].
- Ophelia is associated with the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood movement[9].
- Ophelia's genre is history painting[10].
- Ophelia's based on is recorded as Hamlet[11].
- Ophelia's depicts is recorded as Ophelia[12].
- Ophelia's depicts is recorded as drowning[13].
- Ophelia's depicts is recorded as dress[14].
- Ophelia's depicts is recorded as watercourse[15].
- Ophelia's depicts is recorded as waist-length hair[16].
- Ophelia's depicts is recorded as red hair[17].
- Ophelia's depicts is recorded as windthrow[18].
- Ophelia's depicts is recorded as Urtica dioica[19].
- Ophelia's depicts is recorded as bouquet[20].
- Ophelia's depicts is recorded as shore[21].
- Ophelia's depicts is recorded as willow[22].
- Ophelia's depicts is recorded as floating[23].
- Ophelia's depicts is recorded as suicide[24].
- Ophelia's depicts is recorded as Elizabeth Siddal[25].
- Ophelia's depicts is recorded as Rosa rubiginosa[26].
- Ophelia's depicts is recorded as Lythrum salicaria[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Ophelia is the creator of John Everett Millais[3].
Publication
Ophelia's genre is history painting[10].
Subject and Themes
Ophelia's main subject is Ophelia[28]. Ophelia is associated with the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood movement[9].
Material and Period
Recorded made from material include oil paint[29] and canvas[30]. The location of Ophelia was Tate Britain[31].
Why It Matters
Ophelia ranks in the top 0.4% of painting entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (4,820 views/month, #24 of 5,957).[2] Ophelia has Wikipedia articles in 24 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[32] Ophelia is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[33]