John Everett Millais, Bubbles (article) | Khan Academy (2024)

by Dr. Rebecca Jeffrey Easby

John Everett Millais, Bubbles, 1886, oil on canvas (Unilever, on long loan to Lady Lever Art Gallery, Liverpool)

The innocence of childhood

Victorian art is often dismissed as an overly sentimental and cutesy style of painting, and nowhere are these qualities more apparent than in Bubbles by John Everett Millais. Painted in 1886, Bubbles captures the innocence of childhood with all the technical mastery of a mature and talented artist. But the painting also raises questions about the importance of serious subject matter, Victorian taste, and the relationship between art and advertising in the 19th century.

Jean Siméon Chardin, Soap Bubbles, c. 1733–34, oil on canvas, 61 x 63.2 cm (The Metropolitan Museum of Art)

Bubbles is in fact a portrait of Millais’s four-year-old grandson William Milbourne James. According to the artist’s biography written by his son J.G. Millais, the picture was produced “simply and solely for his own pleasure. He was very fond of his little grandson Willie James — a singularly beautiful and most winning child — and seeing him one day blowing soap bubbles through a pipe, he thought what a dainty picture he would make.” [1]

In the painting the angelic looking, red-cheeked young boy looks up at the floating bubbles, his blond curls creating a halo around his head. Seated in a dingy, non-descript background, he is dressed in a velvet suit with a ruffled lace collar, not the most practical clothing for a small boy. The various textures in the painting are beautifully recreated, as is the bubble, which the biography says was created with a sphere of crystal the artist had made “to get the lights and colors right,” because actual bubbles were too momentary to paint. The bubbles themselves echo back to the tradition of the “

,” symbolic of the fragility and fleeing nature of human existence (think, for example, of Chardin's Soap Bubbles). And the association of the bubbles with the young boy remained so ingrained that young Willie, who as an adult rose to be an admiral in the Royal Navy, was called “Bubbles” for the rest of his life.

Did Millais sell out?

By the time this was painted in 1886, Millais was one of the most prominent artists of the Victorian age.Bubbles, which was originally going to be titledA Child’s World, is typical of many of Millais’s paintings of the period and exemplifiesthe reasons for his popularity with the Victorian audience. His many pictures of beautiful children, in both contemporary and historical dress, masterfully capture the innocence of childhood. Millais’s artistic virtuosity is evident, and combined with the wistful nature of the subjects, the artist’s paintings were calculated to pull at Victorian heartstrings. It is no wonder that Millais was a financially successful and sought after painter.

John Everett Millais, Cherry Ripe, 1879 (Private Collection)

A few years before, Millais’s painting of a charming girl in an 18th-century costume, Cherry Ripe, had taken the Victorian art world by storm. The painting sold for £1,000 to the editor of the art journal The Graphic, William Luson Thomas. In December 1880 the magazine offered prints of the painting made by engraver Samuel Cousins, selling at least 500,000, with an estimated additional 500,000 people unable to obtain a copy. The incredible popularity of the image meant that according to J. G. Millais, “Thanks to the engraver’s and woodcutter’s art, Cherry Ripe found its way into the remotest parts of the English-speaking world, and everywhere that sweet presentment of English Childhood won the hearts of the people. From Australian miners, Canadian backwoodsmen, South African treckers, . . . came to the artist letters of the warmest congratulation.” [2] For an artist with a wife and eight children to support, this popular and financial success must have been welcome.

J. G. Millais explained that Bubbles was purchased for The Illustrated London News by Sir William Ingram, and the artist expected it to be reproduced in a similarly commercial manner as Cherry Ripe. Copyright to the image was also ceded to Ingram. In 1887 the painting (along with the copyright) was sold to the Thomas Barratt, managing director of Pears Soap. Known as “the father of modern advertising” Barratt added the company logo to the picture and began using the image to advertise its signature product.

Proof of advertisem*nt for Pears Soap, adapted from a painting by Sir John Everett Millais, Bubbles, c. 1888 or 1889, color lithograph, 16.5 x 11.6 cm (V&A)

According to J. G. Milllais, at first the artist was “furious,” but ultimately “admitted that the work was admirably done,” but expressed “his regret at the purpose to which it was to be turned.” The younger Millais also offers his opinion that “the example they set has tended to raise the character of our illustrated advertisem*nts, whether in papers or posters, and may possibly lead to the final extinction of such atrocious vulgarities as now offend the eye at every turn.” [3] Others were not so forgiving and a spirited debate over

in such a pedestrian use as advertising continued.The novelist Marie Corelli included a reference to this in her 1895 The Sorrows of Satan when one of the characters laments “the fame of Millais as an artist was marred when he degraded himself to the level of painting the little green boy blowing bubbles of Pears Soap.” [4] After discussion with the artist, Corelli removed the offending phrase from later editions of the novel, but the sentiment of the time was clear. Millais was stepping into new artistic territory.

A famous artist

In his own lifetime, Millais’ fame as an artist far outshone that of his early Pre-Raphaelite comrades. Millais’ election as an Associate of the Royal Academy in 1853 was, according to Dante Gabriel Rossetti, the end of the PRB.One wonders what Rossetti (who died in 1882) would have thought of a painting like Bubbles or Millais’ election as President of the Royal Academy in 1896, although he was only to serve for 6 months before his death at age 67. Of the original Pre-Raphaelite Brothers, John Everett Millais was the one to stray farthest from the original ideals of the brotherhood. Much of his later work, which mainly consisted of portraits, child subjects, and moodylandscapes is far different from his earlier Pre-Raphaelite choices of medieval and literary subjects and historical star-crossed lovers. His handling of thepaint itself also changes, becoming more fluid and far less detailed.These changes moved him away from his early Pre-Raphaelite aesthetic, however, in doing so he became one of the greatest artists of the Victorian period.

Notes

  1. J.G. Millais, The Life and Letters of Sir John Everett Millais, vol. 2, 9 (London; Methuen & Co., 1899), p. 186

  2. J.G. Millais, The Life and Letters of Sir John Everett Millais, vol. 2, 9 London; Methuen & Co., 1899), p. 121–2.

  3. J.G. Millais, The Life and Letters of Sir John Everett Millais, vol. 2, 9 (London; Methuen & Co., 1899), p. 189.

  4. J.G. Millais, The Life and Letters of Sir John Everett Millais, vol. 2, 9 (London; Methuen & Co., 1899), p. 189

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Essay by Dr. Rebecca Jeffrey Easby

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John Everett Millais, Bubbles (article) | Khan Academy (2024)

FAQs

What is the famous bubble painting by Sir John Everett Millais? ›

Bubbles, originally titled A Child's World, is an 1886 painting by Sir John Everett Millais that became famous when it was used over many generations in advertisem*nts for Pears soap. During Millais's lifetime, it led to widespread debate about the relationship between art and advertising.

Who painted his grandson in the painting Bubbles? ›

Pears bought a painting by Sir John Everett Millais (1829–1896) of his grandson in 1886. He then reproduced it as a print, which became known as 'Bubbles'. In this version, a bar of soap and the name of the company were added to the image. Such 'artistic' advertising appeared in the UK in the 1880s.

Where is the painting Bubbles? ›

Image of Where is the painting Bubbles?
The Lady Lever Art Gallery is a museum founded and built by the industrialist and philanthropist William Lever, 1st Viscount Leverhulme and opened in 1922. The Lady Lever Art Gallery is set in the garden village of Port Sunlight, on the Wirral and one of the National Museums Liverpool.
Wikipedia

When was Bubbles painted? ›

What is the world's largest bubble painting? ›

The largest bubble wrap painting is 97.78 m² (1,052 ft²), and was achieved by BAPS Swaminarayan Sanstha (UK) in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India, on 7 December 2022.

What painting is considered the greatest painting ever lived and who created it? ›

Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci (1503-1505)

Admiration for it truly knows no bounds: Napoleon Bonaparte even removed it from the museum and ordered to hang it in his own bedroom. The painting is officially declared priceless, which is not surprising, as this masterpiece is the best art of all time.

Who painted the boy blowing bubbles? ›

Boy Blowing Bubbles (also known as The Soap Bubbles; French: Les Bulles de savon) is an 1867 oil-on-canvas painting by Édouard Manet, who gave it its present title.

Who painted the boy with the Bubbles? ›

Edouard Manet | Boy with Soap Bubbles | The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Who was the American painter who splashed paint? ›

Jackson Pollock is best known for his action paintings and Abstract Expressionist works. For these pieces, many made during his “poured” period, Pollock dripped paint onto canvas to convey the emotion of movement. He explored themes including surrealist navigation of the unconscious and Jungian symbolism.

What do bubbles mean in paintings? ›

In art, because of its fragile nature, the bubble is often seen as a symbol of the brevity or transience of life. Strudwick wrote about the three women below the bubble, saying: “… two of whom are watching a bubble as it floats in the air, the bubble has burst for the third girl and she is in grief.

What is it called when paint bubbles? ›

Paint bubbling is just another way of saying paint blistering. A blister is a pocket of fluid that congregates between dried paint, which can expand and form into blisters or bubbles and break open, leaving damaged paint surfaces or holes and marks left behind.

How does bubble painting work? ›

Directions for Bubble Painting

Mix the paint and bubble solution together. Place a piece of paper on the grass or a table. Dip the bubble wand or a straw into the bubble paint and then blow out bubbles so they land on the paper. Allow to dry before hanging up the colorful bubble paintings!

When did bubbles become popular? ›

While this shows that children have been playing with bubbles for a long time, a Time Magazine list of the 100 greatest toys of all time attributes its burst into popularity to 1940, when Chemtoy, a Chicago cleaning-solution company, first began bottling its bubble solution for sale.

What are the colors of bubbles? ›

Blue-green colors dominate in thicker films and yellow hues in thinner films. Eventually, the film becomes too thin to create interference of visible wavelengths, as all wavelengths are cancelled out. At this point the bubble appears colorless.

Why are there so many colors in bubbles? ›

Bubbles are made up of water with a thin layer of soap on either side. White light contains all the colours of light combined. When that light shines on a bubble it bounces around those layers and some of it reflects back to our eyes. The colours that you get depend on the thickness of the water.

What is the famous painting in good times? ›

The Sugar Shack” is an undeniable star.

The Sugar Shack, the iconic painting of dancing figures by American artist Ernie Barnes, famously graced the cover of a Marvin Gaye album and the credits of the TV show Good Times in the 1970s.

What painting is mostly seen as the most famous painting of all time? ›

1. 'Mona Lisa' If you had any doubts about the wild popularity of "Mona Lisa," the crowds at the Louvre will convince you. It should come as no surprise that the most famous painting in the world is that mysterious woman with the enigmatic smile.

What is the name of one of the most famous paintings ever painted? ›

1. The Mona Lisa – 10 million per year. Unsurprisingly, the most visited painting in the world is also the most famous portrait ever painted – the Mona Lisa. Created by Leonardo da Vinci at the start of the 16th century, it's valued at well over $660 million.

What is the famous vanishing point painting? ›

It's what makes Leonardo da Vinci's "The Last Supper" work so well. In this one, the vanishing point is just above Christ's head. Linear perspective organizes the painting, makes it seem like it's happening in a real space and also directs your eye to the most important part of the scene.

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