Showing posts with label Gustave Moreau. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gustave Moreau. Show all posts

9/6/15

Gustave Moreau, Death Offers Crowns to the Winner of the Tournament

Gustave Moreau, Death Offers Crowns to the Winner of the Tournament painting
Musée Gustave Moreau, Paris

Date: c. 1860
Technique: Oil on canvas, 142 x 92 cm

7/18/15

Gustave Moreau, Victim (Victime)

Gustave Moreau, Victim Victime painting
Musée Gustave Moreau, Paris

Date: 19th century
Technique: Oil on canvas, 80 x 65 cm

8/15/11

Gustave Moreau, The Mystic Flower (Fleur mystique)


Musée national Gustave Moreau, Paris

Date: c. 1890
Technique: Oil on canvas, 253 x 137 cm

Source 1

Source 2

7/29/11

Gustave Moreau, Dream of the Orient or The Peri (Rêve d'Orient / La Péri)


Private collection

Date: c. 1881
Technique: Watercolour and gouache on paper, 24.9 x 17 cm

Source 1
Source 2

3/5/11

Gustave Moreau, Phaethon


Musée du Louvre, Paris

Date: 1878
Technique: Watercolour, 65 x 99 cm

Source

Gustave Moreau, Night


Pushkin Museum, Moscow

Date: c. 1880
Technique: Watercolour with gouache, 20.9 x 26.4 cm

Source

1/13/11

Gustave Moreau, Oedipus and the Sphinx


Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Date: 1864
Technique: Oil on canvas, 206.4 x 104.8 cm

Source

12/24/10

Gustave Moreau, Hercules and the Lernaean Hydra


The Art Institute of Chicago

Date: 1875-76
Technique: Oil on canvas, 179.3 x 154 cm

Source

11/9/10

Gustave Moreau, Orpheus (Orphée)


Musée d'Orsay, Paris

Date: 1865
Technique: Oil on wood, 155 x 99.5 cm

In Greek mythology, Orpheus's skill as a poet and musician was such that he even charmed wild beasts. He had the misfortune of charming the Maenads, who tore him to pieces after the death of Eurydice to punish him for rebuffing their advances.
Gustave Moreau continued the myth, with the vision of a girl dressed in Oriental finery rescuing the poet's head. Is she a wise virgin to efface the memory of the mad Bacchantes?

The poet's head rests on his lyre, and the girl is gazing at him with a melancholy air. The two faces, strangely similar with their closed eyes, seem absorbed in infinite contemplation. The horrible ordeal is followed by a calm scene mysteriously free of morbidity and bathed in a twilight glow, with a fantastic landscape in the background worthy of Leonardo Da Vinci. The diagonal compositions suggests a playing card, in which the musicians in the top left corner are balanced by the turtles, lower right, whose carapace, according to the myth, was used to make the first lyre.

In Orpheus, we sense the emergence of a semi-fantastic world with disturbing atmospheres, impregnated with ambiguous charms. The golden chiaroscuro, complex composition and sensual yet mystic mood that characterised Moreau's mature style about 1870 are already in place here.
For all these reasons, Moreau counts as a decisive figure in the Symbolist movement.

Source 1
Source 2

Gustave Moreau, The Apparition


Musee Gustave Moreau, Paris

Date:
c. 1874-76
Technique: Oil on canvas, 142 x 103 cm