The Mirror of Venus – (Edward Coley Burne-Jones) voorgaand Volgende


Artiest:

Stijl: Pre-Raphaelites;Italian Renaissance

Topics: Figures Men Mirrors Virgin Gods Women

Tatum: 1898

Trootte: 121 x 200 cm

Tuseum: Gulbenkian Foundation (Lisbon, Portugal)

Techniek: Oil On Canvas;Canvas;Oil

The scene is purely imaginary, and shows Venus and her maidens gazing at their reflections in a pool of water. The landscape is arid and rocky; these strangely lunar landscapes were to become a recurring feature of his art, widely imitated by his followers. The mood and the colour are Pre-Raphaelite, but the conscious sweetness and elegance of the figures recall the Italian Renaissance, and, in particular, Botticelli, an artist greatly admired by Burne-Jones, and later to become a cult among fashionable aesthetes. The conception is purely aesthetic — a ring of beautiful girls in lovely draperies, with a minimum of narrative of historical content. The draperies are pseudo-classical, and the title is Venus, but the picture could equally have been given a vague allegorical title. Through the faces of the girls and their wistful expressions Burne-Jones conveys that feeling of intense sadness and nostalgia for the past.

This artwork is in the public domain.

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Edward Coley Burne-Jones – Meest bekeken kunstwerken

Public domain

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