The Devil's Daughter (painting)

"The Devil's Daughter" is a 1917 painting by Welsh society artist Margaret Lindsay Williams. It was painted in oils on stretched canvas,[1] and is one of Williams' best known works.

The painting is a work in the "wages of sin" allegorical genre popular in the early 20th century, when the conduct of society women came in for much criticism.[2] In addition to portraits of notable people such as Queen Alexandra and Gwilym Lloyd George, Margaret Lindsay Williams created several works in this style. It was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1917,[3] where it "created something of a sensation".[4] According to Country Life, her paintings in this style generated considerable public interest; it refers to them as "problem pictures".[5]

A sequel painting, "The Triumph", was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1918,[6] and another in the series, "The Imprisoned Soul", was painted in 1920.[5]

Subject of the painting

The subject of "The Devil's Daughter" is a woman holding a fan and holding a human skull. A death's head with bat's wings adorns her headdress, and she turns away from a crucifix being held up to her by an unseen person.

gollark: I mean, "list of AI" is probably easy enough, you could just... search github using some keywords, and maybe research papers.
gollark: Just because you can describe a task in a sentence or so doesn't mean you can give a description clear and detailed enough to think about programming it.
gollark: Early attempts at AI back in the last millennium tried to create AIs by giving them logical reasoning abilities and a large set of facts. This didn't really work; they did some things, hit the limits of the facts they had, and didn't do anything very interesting.
gollark: They don't even have *memory* - you just train the model a bunch, keep that around, feed it data, and then get the results; next time you want data out, you use the original model from the training phase.
gollark: They don't really have goals, only the training code does, and that goal is something like "maximize prediction accuracy with respect to the data".

References

  1. "The Devil's Daughter". Grapefruit Moon Gallery. Retrieved 11 February 2018.
  2. "About". 1stdibs. Retrieved 11 February 2018.
  3. Peter Lord. "WILLIAMS, MARGARET LINDSAY (1888-1960)". Welsh Biography Online. National Library of Wales. Retrieved 11 February 2018.
  4. The Strand. G. Newnes. 1919.
  5. Country Life. 1920.
  6. Arthur Mee (1921). Who's who in Wales. Western Mail Limited.
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