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Topics

Birth, marriage and death

  • Summary
Chatterton
Image credit: Tate

Chatterton

Henry Wallis (1830–1916)

Tate

The most important events of life have always been subjects for art. Stories from the Bible and from Greek and Roman mythology often revolve around such fundamental aspects of life. Many objects in art, for example skulls, carry universal meanings that were intended to educate, to inspire, or to warn the viewer.


From the seventeenth century, when human life itself became a more common subject, these events appealed more directly viewers’ own experiences.

Read more
Portraits were often commissioned to mark such occasions, especially marriages, with their strong message of love and family alliance. The moments of birth and death themselves are less often depicted in their sometimes grim reality, though death masks are a reminder of such occasions.

Artworks

  • 'Take your Son, Sir'
    'Take your Son, Sir' Ford Madox Brown (1821–1893)
    Tate Britain
  • The Death of Chatterton
    The Death of Chatterton Henry Wallis (1830–1916)
    Birmingham Museums Trust
  • Memento Mori
    Memento Mori Jan Davidsz de Heem (1606–1683/1684)
    York Art Gallery
  • Death of a Child
    Death of a Child John Arthur Dodgson (1890–1969)
    Arts Council Collection, Southbank Centre
  • The Mother
    The Mother Thomas Musgrave Joy (1812–1866)
    York Art Gallery
  • Bridegroom Drinking from a Creek
    Bridegroom Drinking from a Creek Arthur Boyd (1920–1999)
    Leicester Museum & Art Gallery
  • Sketch for a Feast
    Sketch for a Feast François Boucher (1703–1770) (after)
    York Art Gallery
  • 254 more

Stories

  • Using Art UK for family history research

    Katey Goodwin

  • 'I paint dead people': posthumous portraits

    Jade King

  • Ten works of art celebrating motherhood

    Róisín Lanigan

  • Portraying pregnancy: from prehistoric art to Jacobean portraiture

    Lydia Figes

  • A rare survival from the Tudor period: 'Cornelia Burch, Aged Two Months'

    Sonia Roe

  • Dod and Ernest Procter: Newlyn flowers and figure studies

    Averil King

  • Meghan, Harry and weddings in art

    Bee Tajudeen

  • The nation's scariest art, part 2: dare you explore the Wellcome Collection?

    Jade King

  • Funerals, processions, lying-in-state: depicting grief in art

    Andrew Shore

  • Bedbound: sex, birth, convalescence and death in British art

    Rosemary Waugh

  • Children in seventeenth-century Dutch art: Portrait of a Girl, Aged One, with a Basket of Strawberries

    Alice Soulieux-Evans

  • Art Detective uncovers tragic story of 'unknown soldier'

    Alice Read


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  • dlb foundation
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  • heritage fund
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Art UK is the operating name of the Public Catalogue Foundation, a charity registered in England and Wales (1096185) and Scotland (SC048601).

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® is a registered trade mark of the Public Catalogue Foundation.
Art UK is the operating name of the Public Catalogue Foundation, a charity registered in England and Wales (1096185) and Scotland (SC048601).