Mythological Subjects. I. Achilles to the Graces
Carl Van De Velde Fiona Healy Karolien De Clippel Elizabeth Mcgrath et al
Harvey Miller Publishers
English Text.
London, 2016; clothbound, pp. 700, col. ill., cm 22x28.
(Corpus Rubenianum Ludwig Burchard. 11. 1).
(Corpus Rubenianum Ludwig Burchard. 0011. HMCRLB 11).
series: Corpus Rubenianum Ludwig Burchard
ISBN: 0-905203-67-4 - EAN13: 9780905203676
Subject: Graphic Arts (Prints, Drawings, Engravings, Miniatures),Painting
Period: 1400-1800 (XV-XVIII) Renaissance
Languages:
Weight: 0.73 kg
No painter was so at home in the literature of the Greeks and Romans. When he painted for pleasure, which, increasingly in the course of his life, he felt able to do, he used pagan myth to express and celebrate themes of love, beauty and the creative forces of nature, often in wonderfully idiosyncratic ways. At the same time, as a Christian committed to the ideals of the Catholic Reformation, Rubens respected the restrictions generally placed on the depiction of pagan tales. Most of his mythological paintings were made for private settings, for display within houses (including his own) or in the galleries of princes, noblemen and prelates.
It is happy accident of history that these splendid paintings are now widely visible in the great museums of the world.
Konrad. Per quanto un'oca allunghi il collo non diventerà mai un cigno