Daydreams, 1859. Creator: Thomas Couture.
Sujet

Daydreams, 1859. Creator: Thomas Couture.

Légende

Daydreams, 1859. Since the 16th century, a figure blowing bubbles has served as an allegory for the vice of vanity. A schoolboy slouches on a chair beside his unopened books as bubbles drift overhead. The note tucked in the broken glass reads: "Le Parasseux indigne de vivre" (the lazy one unworthy of living). The soap bubbles and the crumbling wall suggest the fleeting nature of time, and the laurel wreath symbolizes glory ignored. Rejecting prevailing academic traditions, Couture developed a highly personal technique involving bright colors and expressive paint textures, which was based on his studies of Venetian works in the Louvre Museum. He frequently depicted contemporary subjects but filled them with moral overtones. An influential teacher, Couture trained such artists as Edouard Manet, Puvis de Chavannes, Mary Cassatt, and Eastman Johnson.

Date

1859

Crédit

Photo12/Heritage Images/Heritage Art

Notre référence

HRM23B22_191

Model release

NA

Property release

NA

Licence

Droits gérés

Format disponible

53,5Mo (2,6Mo) / 31,9cm x 42,0cm / 3772 x 4960 (300dpi)

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