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Szépművészeti Múzeum Grafikai Gyűjtemény [GRA_1890]
Venus lefegyverzi Amort (Szépművészeti Múzeum CC BY-NC-SA)
Provenance/Rights: Szépművészeti Múzeum (CC BY-NC-SA)
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Venus Disarming Cupid

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Description

The splendid drawing is one of the most elaborate versions of the theme that preoccupied the painter for a long time and was popular in the sixteenth century. According to Ovid’s Metamorphoses Cupid accidentally wounded, with his arrow, his mother Venus, who then fell in love with the mighty but mortal hunter Adonis. Consequently, the goddess of love came to experience all the torments of consuming passion. The furious Venus therefore disarms her son. More than half a dozen surviving studies testify that Parmigianino initially envisaged a highly dynamic composition. The goddess provides a masterful example of the figura serpentinata, an exaggerated and elegant twisted pose, which was beloved of Mannerist and Baroque artists. The pink prepared paper, the wash rich in tones and the painterly use of body colour are evocative of chiaroscuro woodcuts (colour woodcut printed from different woodblocks). Between 1527 and 1530, when the drawings were made, Parmigianino was working with the woodcutter Antonio da Trento, and so the Budapest sheet was possibly intended for woodcuts, which was probably never realized.Text: © Zoltán Kárpáti, 2015

Material/Technique

prepared paper / pen, wash, ink, white heightening, black chalk

Measurements

188 x 143 mm

Szépművészeti Múzeum

Object from: Szépművészeti Múzeum

A budapesti Szépművészeti Múzeum 1906. december 1-jén, Ferenc József osztrák császár és magyar király jelenlétében nyitotta meg kapuit. Története...

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