- Source: The Funeral of Shelley
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- The Funeral of Shelley
- Percy Bysshe Shelley
- Louis Édouard Fournier
- Leigh Hunt
- Romantic poetry
- Walker Art Gallery
- Edward John Trelawny
- 1889 in art
- Shelley Conn
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The Funeral of Shelley is an 1889 painting by the French artist Louis Édouard Fournier (1857–1917). The painting which is considered Fournier's most famous work is held in the permanent collection of the Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool, England.
The canvas depicts a funeral pyre on a beach in Viareggio, Italy where in 1819 the English Romantic poet Percy Bysshe Shelley's body washed ashore after he drowned while sailing on his schooner "Don Juan" (named after the work by Byron) on the Gulf of Spezia during a storm, he could not swim. The scene it depicts is said to be partially historically inaccurate.
Fournier shows Percy Shelley's friend Lord Byron and his wife the novelist Mary Shelley as attending the event but is said neither actually stood in attendance during the immolation (Byron uneasy over the sight of the body went swimming in the sea and Mary Shelley was elsewhere nearby, as was customary for widows at that time). It is also said that Shelley was actually immolated in a furnace brought to the beach. The three men who are depicted watching are Edward John Trelawny (from whose written account we know much of what occurred), Leigh Hunt, and Lord Byron. Mary Shelley is depicted in the backdrop.