About this artwork
Melville was a great traveller and in 1881 he set off for the Middle East on an extended trip travelling first to Cairo, then east as far as Karachi, and then back to the Persian Gulf. The resulting sketches proved a source of inspiration for his work for years to follow. The tale of King Cophetua and the Beggar maid appears in Elizabethan ballads and was favoured by Victorian artists, notably by Burne-Jones in his large oil depicting the story. According to legend, King Cophetua disdained all women until he saw a beautiful young beggar and fell in love with her at first sight – the moment depicted here. The beggar maid is the figure dressed in grey, with her back turned to the viewer.
Updated before 2020
see media-
artist:Arthur Melville (1855 - 1904) Scottish
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title:King Cophetua and the Beggar Maid
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date created:Dated 1898
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materials:Watercolour on paper
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object type:
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credit line:Dr John Kirkhope Bequest 1920
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accession number:D NG 1486
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gallery:
Arthur Melville
Arthur Melville
Melville's travels in Europe and the Middle East inspired his vibrant paintings in oil and watercolour. He developed a distinctive technique of watercolour painting, described as 'blottesque', using dabs of pigment on wet paper and blotting them with a sponge. Melville, born in Angus, studied...