Schalken the Painter (1839) is a brilliant early work that fuses the supernatural with the visual arts, setting the stage for Le Fanu's signature subtle dread. It follows the story of a young, ambitious Dutch painter named Godfrey Schalken and his entanglement with a devastatingly beautiful young woman, Rose Velderkaust. Rose is essentially sold by her greedy uncle to a mysterious, silent, and immensely wealthy suitor named Mynher Vanderhausen. This suitor is not human, but a being with an unearthly chill, and the painting Schalken later creates becomes the terrifying vehicle for the truth of this diabolic bargain.
This story is a quintessential piece of Gothic Classicism, admired for its stunningly eerie atmosphere, its themes of Faustian contract, and its profound exploration of unholy horror concealed behind the facade of wealth and respectability. It perfectly blends artistic obsession with spectral dread.