These are four of forty-five designs made by Burne-Jones for wood engravings, illustrating the story of Cupid and Psyche for a lavish publication of William Morris' The Earthly Paradise, which was ultimately abandoned. A large group of a hundred sketches and designs for The Earthly Paradise illustrations are in the collection at Birmingham City Art Gallery. Within a bound volume of eighty-six designs for episodes in the saga of Psyche is a letter from Burne-Jones’ assistant, Charles Fairfax Murray, which describes another group of drawings for the project (Ashmolean Museum, Oxford): ' A series of designs for the Story of Cupid & Psyche illustrating the 'Earthly Paradise' mounted in a volume. The drawings presented by Mr Ruskin to the Oxford University [in the collection of the Ashmolean] are on tracing paper and in every respect similar in technique to the designs for the 'Hill of Venus' and 'Pygmalion' have exhibited. Once the main comp[osition] was settled the design was forwarded and completed by successive tracings enabling the artist to correct or develop the designs with comparatively trifling labour. The process as far as we know was only used by the artist for the drawings prepared for the engravings for the Earthly Paradise and was not his usual practice.' One of the compositions depicts the marriage of Pygmalion and Galatea in the temple of the God of Betrothal, Hymen. In the background is the winged figure of Cupid and his mother Venus who holds out the Apple of Discord awarded to her during the Judgement of Paris. The composition is identical to a later gouache painting executed by Burne-Jones in 1874. These drawings were given to Burne-Jones' friend Charles Eliot Norton, a Harvard professor and editor of North American Review. Of the volume of bound designs for Morris's projected Earthly Paradise: Birmingham Art Galleries' collection of a bound volume containing 86 studies for illustrations to 'The Story of Cupid and Psyche' made to accompany the poem in William Morris' 'The Earthly Paradise'. The project was abandoned, but not before Burne-Jones had made a great number of drawings, particularly for the Story of Cupid and Psyche. A letter by Charles Fairfax Murray is mounted in the volume, it records: ' A series for designs for the Story of Cupid & Psyche illustrating the 'Earthly Paradise' mounted in a volume. The drawings presented by Mr Ruskin to the Oxford University [in the collection of the Ashmolean] are on tracing paper and in every respect similar in technique to the designs for the 'Hill of Venus' and 'Pygmalion' have exhibited. Once the main comp[osition] was settled the design was forwarded and completed by successive tracings enabling the artist to correct or develop the designs with comparatively trifling labour. The process as far as we know was only used by the artist for the drawings prepared for the engravings for the Earthly Paradise and was not his usual practice. The list of subjects at the beginning of the vol[ume] is in the handwriting of Wm Morris [these actually reference the wood engravings, not these illustrations, see 1913P155-208]'. (Bequeathed by James Richardson Holliday, 1927.)
Bodleian Library MS. Douce 195 Manuscript illustrations from ( fol. 150v , fol. 151r ) Le roman de la rose Shelfmark: Bodleian Library MS. Douce 195 Holding Institution: Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford Date Statement: 15th century, end Place of Origin: France Language: French, Middle (ca. 1400-1600) Catalogue Description: Catalogue of Western Medieval Manuscripts in Oxford Libraries Author: Guillaume de Lorris Jean de Meun Burne-Jones and Morris visited the Bodleian library to look at manuscripts while they were students, so that from an early age they were aware of this script.