Richard Dadd: Beyond Madness

Richard Dadd: Beyond Madness
#Exhibitions
Richard Dadd, Portrait of a Young Man, 1853 | Courtesy © Tate Britain, London

For more than a century, Richard Dadd has been remembered as much for his personal story as for his paintings. The Royal Academy in London now seeks to rebalance that relationship with a major retrospective that places the work of one of the most original painters of the Victorian era back at the centre of attention. Born in Chatham, Kent, in 1817, Dadd entered the Royal Academy Schools in the late 1830s and quickly attracted the attention of both critics and the public for the almost miniature-like precision of his draughtsmanship and his ability to create images suspended between reality and imagination. A decisive turning point came in 1842, when he was invited to join an extended journey through the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East. The itinerary included Greece, Turkey, Syria, Palestine and Egypt. As was the case for many nineteenth-century European artists, exposure to unfamiliar landscapes, architecture and cultures had a profound impact on his imagination. The sketchbooks and watercolours produced during the trip reveal an attentive and curious observer, capable of recording architectural details and scenes of everyday life with extraordinary accuracy. It was during this journey, however, that the first signs of serious mental illness began to emerge. Upon his return to Europe, his condition deteriorated rapidly. After killing his father, Dadd fled to France, where he was arrested and subsequently institutionalised. He spent more than forty years between London's Bethlem Hospital, the infamous "Bedlam", and Broadmoor Criminal Lunatic Asylum. The exhibition devotes considerable attention to the works produced at Bethlem and Broadmoor, where Dadd returned to the fantastical subjects that had characterised his youth. During these years he created works such as Contradiction. Oberon and Titania and, above all, The Fairy Feller's Master-Stroke, the painting with which his name remains most closely associated. Completed after nearly a decade of work, the canvas presents a crowd of tiny figures immersed in dense vegetation, captured in the instant before an apparently insignificant gesture charged with narrative tension. The exhibition also highlights a lesser-known aspect of his years in the hospitals. Dadd did not work in isolation. He painted portraits of doctors and administrators, designed scenery for the Broadmoor theatre and even produced certificates and awards for members of staff. His creative activity therefore remained closely intertwined with the daily life of the institutions that housed him. Over recent decades, Dadd's reputation has gradually moved beyond mere biographical curiosity. Art historians, writers and contemporary artists have come to regard his work as one of the most original expressions of the Victorian imagination, engaging with Romanticism, Symbolism and sensibilities that would only emerge many years later. The exhibition's title, Beyond Bedlam, reflects precisely this shift in perspective: not to ignore the mental illness that shaped his life, but to move beyond its anecdotal dimension.
Veronica Azzari - © 2026 ARTE.it for Bvlgari Hotel London