This painted wooden panel is one of a set of four. It is probably an example of the early work produced by William Morris (1834-1896), Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828-1882) and Edward Burne-Jones (1833-1898) while based at premises in Red Lion Square, London. It is likely that the panels may have been part of a large piece of furniture such as a settle, perhaps even the built-in settle in the drawing room at Red House: William Morris’s home in Bexleyheath, Kent, designed by Philip Webb (1831-1915). It is uncertain which of Morris’s circle was responsible for the painting of the panels. However, this panel is most likely to have been painted by Rossetti. The subject of the panels suggests the seasons. This particular example is most likely to be Summer but there is no evidence to suggest that the panels were ever intended to be ‘labelled’ in this way.
The lady regarding a birds nest in a flowering shrub, wearing an elaborate white headdress is the only panel of the set that can be attributed too Burne-Jones. The maiden drinking from a fountain is by Rossetti and the other two panels can be attributed to William Morris.