The Gilded Cage Article Index for
The Gilded
Website Links For
Cage
 

Information About

The Gilded Cage




''The Gilded Cage'' is an Oil Painting by Evelyn De Morgan , her final work before her death in 1919 . It is essentially an Allegory for Female Captivity .

In this painting, a woman looks out a window with her hand stretched out and up in a heartbreaking gesture of yearning. She is looking at: a group of Gypsy figures, dancing carefree under the open sky. The principal figure among the gypsy group is a woman who dances while holding her baby close to her, thus suggesting an alternative vision of maternal duty.

Soaring free about the Dancing group is a Bird , which contrasts sharply to the captive bird in the gilded cage that hangs beside the woman's much older husband. The husband seems oblivious to his wife's state of mind. The woman in the painting has made her decision. She wishes to experience, to dance, to be free, and she rejects material comfort and social acceptability. This decision is reflected in the jewelry which she has removed and dropped at her feet.

Also on the floor and disregarded is an open book, which signifies her rejection of tradition, convention, and old ideas. De Morgan includes art in her condemnation, as the books on the husband's desk are clearly labeled, "Poetry," "Music," and "Art."