Found (1869). Oil on canvas. 89 x 76. Found is an unfinished oil painting by Dante Gabriel Rossetti, now in the Delaware Art Museum. The painting is Rossetti's only treatment in oil of a contemporary moral subject, urban prostitution, and although the work remained incomplete at Rossetti's death in 1882, he always considered it one of his most important works, returning to it many times from the mid-1850s until the year before his death. Unlike the majority of Rossetti's work of the 1850s, which were small-scale drawings and watercolours characterised by medieval and early Renaissance revivalism, Found was Rossetti's only attempt at a contemporary subject, prostitution, that was done in oils. Rossetti had addressed the topic of prostitution as early as 1847 in letters to his friend William Bell Scott, who wrote the poem Rosabell in 1846 on the topic. The Gate of Memory, a drawing Rossetti made c. 1854, shows a scene from Rosabell where a prostitute is beginning her evening of work, and views a group of innocent girls still at play dancing. The drawing may have been intended to illustrate the poem in a book, but was painted as a larger watercolour in 1857, which was repainted in 1864. In 1870 Rossetti published a sympathetic poem about a prostitute, Jenny. The artist Alexander Munro's maid Ellen Frazer may have posed for an early head-study for the fallen country girl of Found, and an ink-and-wash study of the composition is dated 1853. Rossetti began work on the painting in the autumn of 1854; this is probably the unfinished version now in Carlisle. On 30 September 1853 Rossetti wrote to his mother and sister describing the type of wall, cart and calf that he wished for them to find as models so that he could begin the painting. The unfinished Carlisle version consists only of these three elements, plus the head of Fanny Cornforth, apparently added later. Ford Madox Brown noted in his diary Rossetti's difficulties in painting the calf in November 1854, he paints it in all like Albert Durer hair by hair & seems incapable of any breadth. From want of habit I see nature bothers him, but it is sweetly drawn & felt. The calf's role in the painting is two-fold. First, it explains why the farmer has come to the city. But more importantly, its situation as an innocent animal trapped and on its way to be sold parallels the woman's and raises questions on the woman's state of mind. Is the prostitute rejecting salvation or is she accepting it; or is she repentant but unable to escape her fate, like the calf? In 1855, Rossetti described his work-in-progress in a letter to William Holman Hunt: I can tell you, on my own side, of only one picture fairly begun, indeed, I may say, all things considered, rather advanced; but it is only a small one. The subject had been sometime designed before you left England and will be thought, by any one who sees it when finished, to follow in the wake of your Awakened Conscience, but not by yourself, as you know I had long had in view subjects taking the same direction as my present one. The picture represents a London street at dawn, with the lamps still lighted along a bridge which forms the distant background. A drover has left his cart standing in the middle of the road, and has run a little way after a girl who has passed him, wandering in the streets. He has just come up with her and she, recognising him, has sunk under her shame upon her knees, against the wall of a raised churchyard in the foreground, while he stands holding her hands as he seized them, half in bewilderment and half guarding her from doing herself a hurt. These are the chief things in the picture which is to be calledFound, and for which my sister Maria has found me a most lovely motto from Jeremiah. The calf, a white one, will be a beautiful and suggestive part of the thing, though I am far from having painted him as well as I hoped to do. The motto from Jeremiah 2:2 reads I remember Thee; the kindness of thy youth, the love of thy betrothal. and appears on two early compositional studies. Rossetti replaced the word espousal in the motto as he found it with betrothal, which he felt better translated the sense of the original Hebrew. In 1858, Rossetti met Fanny Cornforth, who soon became his mistress. She later described how he invited her to his studio and put my head against the wall and drew it for the head of the calf picture. He made several pen and ink drawings about this time of the heads of both the male and female subjects. A version in oils was commissioned in 1859 by James Leathart, and this version, with the face of Fanny Cornforth, is the painting now in the Delaware Art Museum.