List of paintings by John Everett Millais
Appearance
This work in progress is a list of all paintings by John Everett Millais.
Youthworks
[edit]- Emily Millais. Ca. 1843. Oil on canvas, 59.7 x 49.5 cm. Geoffrey Richard Everett Millais Collection.
- Pizarro Seizing the Inca of Peru. 1846. Oil on canvas, 128,3 x 172,1 cm. Victoria & Albert Museum, London, United Kingdom.
- Self Portrait. 1847. Oil on millboard, 27,3 x 22,2 cm.
- The Artist Attending the Mourning of a Young Girl. Ca. 1847. Oil on board, 18,7 x 25,7 cm.
Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood
[edit]- Isabella. 1848–49. Oil on canvas, 102,9 x 142,9 cm. Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
- The Death of Romeo and Juliet
- Cymon and Iphigeneia
- Ralph Thomas
- William Hugh Fenn
- Ferdinand Lured by Ariel
- 'Christ in the House of His Parents' or 'The Carpenter's Shop'
- Portrait of a Gentleman and his Grandchild (James Wyatt and his Granddaughter, Mary Wyatt)
- Portrait of Four Children of the Wyatt Family
- The Woodman's Daughter
- Mariana
- The Eve of St. Agnes
- Mrs James Wyatt and her Daughter Sarah
- Wilkie Collins
- Thomas Combe
- Ophelia
- A Huguenot, on St Bartholomew's Day, refusing to shield himself from danger by wearing the Roman Catholic badge
- The Return of the Dove to the Ark
- The Bridesmaid
- Emily Patmore (of Emily Augusta Patmore)
- The Order of Release, 1746
- The Proscribed Royalist, 1651
- John Ruskin
- Waterfall at Glenfinlas
- Effie Ruskin
- Effie Ruskin
A.R.A.
[edit]- L'Enfant du Régiment
- The Blind Girl
- Waiting
- The Violet's Message
- Annie Miller
- Autumn Leaves
- The Rescue
- Wandering Thoughts
- Spring
- Peace Concluded, 1856
- Only a Lock of Hair
- The Escape of a Heretic, 1559
- Portrait of Sophy Gray
- Sir Isumbras (A Dream of the Past)
- The Vale of Rest 'Where the weary find repose'
- The Black Brunswicker
- Meditation
- The Ransom
- The Eve of St. Agnes
R.A.
[edit]- The Flower Arrangement[1]
- My First Sermon
- Trust Me
- Lily Noble
- Joan of Arc
- Esther
- Harold Heneage Finch-Hatton
- Leisure Hours
- My Second Sermon
- John Wycliffe Taylor
- Sleeping
- The Parable of the Tares
- Waking
- Hugh Cayley of Wydale
- The Minuet
- Jephthah
- Nina Lehmann
- Sisters
- Souvenir of Velasquez
- Stella
- The Gambler's Wife
- The Boyhood of Raleigh
- The Marchioness of Huntly
- Chill October
- The Knight Errant
- A Somnambulist
- Flowing to the River
- Charles Liddell
- Mrs Bischoffsheim
- 'Oh! that a dream so sweet, so long enjoy'd, Should be so sadly, cruelly destroy'd' – Moore's 'Lalla Rookh'
- Hearts are Trumps: Portraits of Elizabeth, Diana, and Mary, Daughters of Walter Armstrong, Esq.
- Isabella Heugh
- Effie Millais
- Scotch Firs 'The Silence that is in the lonely woods.' – Wordsworth
- Winter Fuel 'Bare ruined choirs, where once the sweet birds sang' – Shakespeare
- New Laid Egg
- Clarissa Bischoffsheim
- The Deserted Garden
- The North-West Passage
- The Fringe of the Moor
- Twins
- 'Over the Hills and Far Away'
- Dead Pheasants
- George Gray Millais
- The Sound of Many Waters
- Lord Ronald Gower
- A Jersey Lily
- Bright Eyes
- Thomas Carlyle
- Yes
- Puss in Boots
- Effie Deans
- The Right Hon. W.E. Gladstone, M.P.
- 'The tower of strength which stood Four-square to all the winds that blew.' – Tennyson
- The Princes in the Tower
- St Martin's Summer
- Cherry Ripe
- Louise Jopling
- Beatrix Caird
- Portrait of the Painter
- Kate Perugini
- Sophie Caird
- The Captive
- Benjamin Disraeli, The Earl of Beaconsfield, K.G.
- Alfred Tennyson
- Cardinal John Henry Newman
- Sir Henry Thompson
- Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marques of Salisbury
- Henry Irving
- Self Portrait
- William Ewart Gladstone
- The Ruling Passion
- Bubbles
- Portia
- Archibald Philip Primrose, 5th Earl of Rosebery
- Christmas Eve
- The Old Garden
- Dew-Drenched Furze
- Glen Birnam
- Dorothy Lawson
- Lingering Autumn 'No spring, nor summer beauty hath such grace/As I have seen in one autumnal face.' – Donne
- 'The Little Speedwell's Darling Blue.' 'In Memorian', – Tennyson
- Mary Chamberlain
- 'Blow, Blow, Thou Winter Wind.' – 'As You Like It', act.ii. sc. 7
- St Stephen
- 'Speak! Speak!'