Venus Wounded by a Rose's Thorn, c. 1516. Creator: Marco Dente (Italian, c. 1486-1527); Antonio Salamanca (c.1500-1562).
Sujet

Venus Wounded by a Rose's Thorn, c. 1516. Creator: Marco Dente (Italian, c. 1486-1527); Antonio Salamanca (c.1500-1562).

Légende

Venus Wounded by a Rose's Thorn, c. 1516. This composition alludes to The Lament for Adonis by the Greek poet Bion (active about 100 BC). In the poem, Venus, distraught by the death of her lover Adonis, wanders barefoot in the woods and is wounded by brambles. Although Bion implores Venus to "weep no longer in the thickets," the poem does not describe the moment depicted here when she plucks a thorn from her foot, imaginatively conceived as a vehicle to present a classical female nude. The wide-eyed hare near Venus is an ancient symbol of fertility and sexual desire.

Date

0

Crédit

Photo12/Heritage Images/Heritage Art

Notre référence

HRM19G18_081

Model release

NA

Property release

NA

Licence

Droits gérés

Format disponible

120,6Mo (7,5Mo) / 44,6cm x 67,7cm / 5270 x 8000 (300dpi)

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