Artist: William Edward Frost (British, 1810 – 1877)
Title: Disarming of Cupid
Medium: Antique engraving on wove paper after the original by master engraver Peter Lightfoot (British, 1805-1885).
Signature: Signed in the plate.
Dimensions: Image Size – 6 3/4 x 10 inches.
Framed Dimensions: Approximately 15 x 19 inches.
Framing: This piece has been professionally matted and framed using all new materials.
Cupid as a youth, sleeping naked at the foot of a tree, on the ground in a forest glade, surrounded by nymphs, one of which kneels in front of him to left, quietly stealing the quiver which lies at his feet, one nymph on the right holding a spear.
Augustus William Edward Frost was an English painter of the Victorian era. Virtually alone among English artists in the middle Victorian period, he devoted his practice to the portrayal of the female nude. Frost was educated in the schools of the Royal Academy, beginning in 1829; he established a reputation as a portrait painter before branching into historical and mythological subjects, including the subgenre of fairy painting that was characteristic of Victorian art. In 1839 he won the Royal Academy’s gold medal for his Prometheus Bound, and in 1843 he won a prize in the Westminster Hall competition for his Una Alarmed by Fauns (a subject from Spenser’s The Faerie Queene). He was elected an associate member of the Royal Academy in 1846, and a full member in 1870. Frost is widely recognized as a follower of William Etty, who preceded him as the primary British painter of nudes in the second quarter of the nineteenth century. Despite the prudishness of the Victorian era, Frost’s relatively chaste nudes were popular, and his career was financially successful.