The Fairy Raid: Carrying Off a Changeling, Midsummer Eve

Image credit: Glasgow Life Museums

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Set at twilight in a dark wood this scene is less innocent than it first appears. While the large fairies are the conventionally beautiful and aristocratic figures of medieval romance, their smaller attendants are the grotesque creatures more often associated with folklore. Other human children, identifiable by their size, wear slender chains around their ankles. One child in particular looks back at the human world he is leaving behind. A recent interpretation of the picture has suggested the theme of child abduction and reasoned that Paton was simultaneously enthralling his audience and increasing their anxiety about an issue which was all too common in Victorian society. Whether or not this was Paton's intention, the picture is a remarkable tour de force. All is rendered with a breathtaking, meticulous attention to detail, the woodland scene bursting with imaginary fairies, knights in armour, fantastic creatures and lush flora and fauna. There are even standing stones on a hill in the distance, making a link with ancient Celtic beliefs in which the artist was so interested. Paton has thus brought together antiquarianism, folklore and chivalry in a typically mid-Victorian way.

Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum

Title

The Fairy Raid: Carrying Off a Changeling, Midsummer Eve

Date

1867

Medium

oil on canvas

Measurements

H 90.5 x W 146.7 cm

Accession number

3234

Acquisition method

gift, 1965

Work type

Painting

Inscription description

signed/dated

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Normally on display at

Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum

Argyle Street, Glasgow G3 8AG Scotland

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