Unravelling the Symbolic Layers in Ford Madox Brown’s ‘The Coat of Many Colours’

This painting is all about jealousy and betrayal

Christopher P Jones
6 min readMay 25, 2023

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The Coat of Many Colours (1866) by Ford Madox Brown. Oil on canvas. 107.5 x 103.2 cm. Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool, UK. Image source Wikimedia Commons

There are some paintings that last the test of being looked at again and again. They provide an experience for the eye, one that deepens with each visit. This image, with its rich and somewhat theatrical first impression, is one such painting.

Not a square inch of the canvas is without detail or some other visual incident. Painted by the British artist Ford Madox Brown in 1866, it tells the story of Joseph and his brothers, a biblical tale of jealousy, betrayal and retribution.

Before examining the painting and its details, it’s worth spending a moment looking at the way the space is illuminated — for this seems to me to dictate so much of the painting’s overall design, its mise en scène.

The Coat of Many Colours (1866) by Ford Madox Brown. Oil on canvas. 107.5 x 103.2 cm. Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool, UK. Image source Wikimedia Commons

Scattered sunlight streams in from the left, falling first on the side of the seated boy with the musical instrument. Next, the light lands on the golden-coloured coat being proffered, as well as upon the men holding it. Meanwhile, the old man sat high on his platform — Jacob, the father of the other…

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