Comola

Various artists/makers

Not on view

Comola (or Comala) is a Scottish princess described by Ossian, here shown seated on a rocky outcrop with a horn at her waist and accompanied by two deer hounds. She waits for her beloved, the warrior Fingal, who has gone into battle, and the fading light suggests his death. Steele's etching was exhibited at the Royal Academy, London in 1883, based on an 1876 painting by Breton Riviere, a British artist with Huguenot roots.
The poet and scholar James Macpherson had published Ossian's poems in the late eighteenth century, claiming them to be translations of a rediscovered fifth-century Celtic epic. Hailed as a northern equivalents to Homer, the texts fired the imaginations of artists. Even after it was established that Macpherson had actually invented the texts, their subjects remained popular.

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