Fairy Feller's Master-Stroke. The Fairy Feller's Master-Stroke is a painting by English artist Richard Dadd.
It was begun in 1855 and worked on until 1864. Dadd painted it while incarcerated in the State Criminal Lunatic Asylum of Bethlem Royal Hospital, where he was confined after he murdered his father in 1843.
It was commissioned by George Henry Haydon, who was head steward of the hospital at the time. Dadd had begun his career as a painter of fairy paintings before the onset of his mental illness.
After he was committed, he was encouraged to resume painting. G. H. Haydon was impressed by Dadd's artistic efforts and asked for a fairy painting of his own.
Dadd worked on the painting for nine years, paying microscopic attention to detail and using a layering technique to produce 3D-like results. Although it is generally regarded as his most important work, Dadd himself considered the painting to be unfinished. He signed the back of the canvas with the inscription: The Fairy-Feller's Master-Stroke, Painted for G. H. Haydon Esqre by Rd. Dadd quasi 1855-64. According to Patricia Allderidge, quasi may mean that it was set aside during that period or that it took a long time to start. The end date, 1864, coincides with Dadd's transfer to Broadmoor Hospital in Berkshire, the asylum where he spent the remaining 21 years of his life. In order to give context to his work, Dadd subsequently wrote a long poem by the