Italian School, c. 1660
Sleeping Venus with Cupid
Oil on canvas
75 x 130 cm
Private collection
Venus and Love/ Venus and Cupid. Different tales exist about the origin of Venus and Cupid. Some say that Venus, the goddess of love and beauty, had a love affair with Mars, the god of war. Out of this relationship, Cupid was born.
Cupid has attributes from both of his parents. Like his mother he is considered to be the god of love, or more precisely, the god of falling in love. He is portrayed as an innocent little child with bow and arrows. He shoots arrows to the heart, and awakening a love that you’re powerless to resist.
Venus and Cupid are often shown in intimate poses, reflecting the unique love between mother and child. More Venus and Love
Italian School, 16th Century. The first
two decades of the 16th century witnessed the harmonious balance and elevated
conception of High Renaissance style, perfected in Florence and Rome by
Leonardo, Raphael, and Michelangelo. It brought together a seamless blend of
form and meaning. In Venice, Bellini, Giorgione, and Titian devoted themselves
to an art that was more sensual, with luminous color and a tactile handling of
paint, preoccupations that would attract Venetian artists for generations,
including Tintoretto and Veronese later in the century.
In the 1520s, Florence and Rome, but not Venice, saw a
stylistic shift following the social and political upheaval ensuing from the
disastrous Sack of Rome. Mannerism, as practiced by Bronzino, Pontormo, and
Rosso, was a self-consciously elegant style that traded naturalism for
artifice, employing unnaturally compressed space, elongated figures, and acid
color. While mannerism became popular internationally, and lingered in northern
Europe, by around 1580 it had fallen out of favor in Italy. One factor was the
desire of the Church, challenged by the Protestant Revolution, to connect with
the faithful. In place of mannerism’s ingenuous complications and
artificiality, the Counter-Reformation Church required painting that was direct
and emotionally resonant. The “reform of painting,” as it was called, was
launched by two brothers and a cousin in Bologna: Annibale, Agostino, and
Lodovico Carracci. They established an academy that emphasized drawing from
life and looked to inspiration from Titian and other Renaissance masters,
restoring the naturalism and classical balance of the early 16th century. More Italian
School, 16th Century
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