Type to search paintings, articles and more.

Victorian art exhibition gallery
Back to Articles

The Last Exhibition, 1917

An article about the last exhibition, 1917 from the John William Waterhouse archive.

The Last Exhibition, 1917

By: Julia Kerr

After Waterhouse’s death in February 1917, four paintings were exhibited at the Royal Academy that year, his last exhibition.

The Enchanted Garden was the painting which Waterhouse was working on at his death: it was left unfinished on his easel.

**No. 63, **Fair Rosamund

**No. 111, **Tristram and Isolde

No. 151, The Enchanted Garden (From Boccaccio’s Tales)

**No. 475, Miranda **

A review in *The Studio *of the Royal Academy exhibition stated that:

The four pictures by Mr. Waterhouse make a pathetic appeal as the last we shall have from a man who for many years past has added much to the interest of the Academy shows—they remind us sadly of the loss we have sustained by his death.

The same issue of *The Studio *also published a lengthy retrospective of Waterhouse’s career by A. L. Baldry with numerous illustrations (this article will be available here shortly).

Articles Browse all articles