Yale Center for British Art
Creator:
John Frederick Lewis, 1804–1876, British
Title:
A Lady Receiving Visitors (The Reception)
Date:
1873
Materials & Techniques:
Oil on panel
Dimensions:
25 × 30 inches (63.5 × 76.2 cm)
Credit Line:
Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection
Copyright Status:
Public Domain
Accession Number:
B1981.25.417
Gallery Label:
The virtuoso painter and watercolorist John Frederick Lewis traveled extensively in Spain and Morocco in the early 1830s and lived between 1841 and 1851 in the Egyptian city of Cairo. Fascinated with Islamic art and culture, Lewis created refined, poetic, and ambiguous images of Egyptian life that rejected popular orientalist stereotypes. Painted over twenty years after his return to England, A Lady Receiving Visitors (The Reception) depicts the mandarah, or the first-floor reception room in an Egyptian house. Although Lewis’s meticulously detailed portrayal of the space implies documentary accuracy, women were not permitted to enter the mandarah. Lewis did not provide an interpretation of the painting, but his depiction of women at ease in a masculine space may be intended to refute contemporary British critiques of the treatment of Muslim women in Egypt and the Middle East, and subversively comment on the domestic restrictions imposed on their British counterparts. Gallery label for installation of YCBA collection, 2016