Thursday, September 27, 2012

Alexandre Cabanel - The Birth of Venus [1875]


The first version of Cabanel's Birth of Venus (Musée d'Orsay, Paris) created a sensation at the Salon of 1863, which was dubbed the Salon of the Venuses owing to the number of alluring nudes on view. Embodying the ideals of academic art, the careful modeling, silky brushwork, and mythological subject of Cabanel’s canvas proved a winning combination: the Salon picture was purchased by no less than Napoleon III for his personal collection. In 1875, John Wolfe commissioned the present, slightly smaller, replica from Cabanel (French, Montpellier, 1823 - Paris, 1889).

[Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York - Oil on canvas, 106 x 182.6 cm]

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