Label TextThis picture depicts a scene from Ann Radcliffe’s Gothic novel The Mysteries of Udolpho: A Romance (1794). It shows the Count, his daughter Lady Blanche, Saint Foix, and their guides, lost in the forest while searching for an inn. With just a single torch and the light of the moon to light their path, they find a 'rude and dangerous passage, formed by an enormous pine ... thrown across the chasm'. Grogan’s painting, typical of the Romantic era, communicates terror and the sublime in equal measure.
Label TextThis picture depicts a scene from Ann Radcliffe’s Gothic novel The Mysteries of Udolpho: A Romance (1794). It shows the Count, his daughter Lady Blanche, Saint Foix, and their guides, lost in the forest while searching for an inn. With just a single torch and the light of the moon to light their path, they find a 'rude and dangerous passage, formed by an enormous pine ... thrown across the chasm'. Grogan’s painting, typical of the Romantic era, communicates terror and the sublime in equal measure.
