One of the four children of Frederick Augustus Maxse (1833-1900), a naval officer and radical, Olive Maxse served as Burne-Jones' model in the 1890s and they were also keen correspondents. His admiration for Maxse was demonstrated when she mentioned to him that a number of her fellow students at the Académie Julian in Paris had suggested that her features resembled those of a Burne-Jones model. He replied: 'Those students at Julian's conceived a high ideal of me if they think they are at all like any heads I paint - I hope it's a little true - for I think you beautiful - and an old artist may tell a young girl that without hurt or blame - and when you come back I shall claim my privilege of drawing from you' (M. Harrison and B. Waters, Burne-Jones, London, 1973, p. 161). There are two similar portrait studies to the present drawing, although the sitter is unconfirmed in both, the first (Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery) dated to 1895 and inscribed by the artist as being for The Sirens (Ringling Museum of Art, Sarasota, Florida. The second is dated 1896 and was sold in these Rooms, 4 June 2009, lot 25. Major C.S. Goldman, a keen collector of Pre-Raphaelite pictures, owned among other things, Burne-Jones's, The Sleep of King Arthur in Avalon (Museo de Arte, Ponce, Puerto Rico), as well as a number of works by D.G. Rossetti. Goldman's pictures were divided between his sons, John Monck and Commander Penryn Monck, and most of them seem to have been dispersed in the 1960s and 1970s. For another study relating to 'The Sleep of King Arthur in Avalon' and a note on the painting, see lot 24.
One of Burne-Jones' many friends was Cecilia Steele Maxse, the estranged wife of Admiral Frederick Augustus Maxse and the mother of Violet (later Viscountess Milner) and Olive, who, in their own rights, became close friends of Burne-Jones'. Violet, born in 1872, was the youngest Maxse child. She had a great interest in art, and studied in Paris from March 1893-January 1894. In June 1894, she married Lord Edward Cecil, a soldier and foreign service officer with whom she traveled widely. Their marriage was not a particularly happy one, and after Cecil's death in 1918, Violet married Sir Alfred Milner, who died in 1925. After her brother Leo's death in 1929, she took over editorship of the National Review, owned by their family since 1893. She had 2 children with Lord Cecil, George and Helen. She died in 1958.