(è åùå 1 çàïèñÿì íà ñàéòå ñîïîñòàâëåíà òàêàÿ ìåòêà)
Äðóãèå ìåòêè ïîëüçîâàòåëÿ ↓
4102 annie miller baron von gloeden beatrice meeting dante at a marriage feast before the battle bluebird burn-jones camille bonard christina georgina rossetti dante gabriel rossetti dudley gallery edward edward poynter elizabeth siddal fanny co feet ferdinand preiss fetish frank cadogan cowper gg augustus leopold girls goblin market hans suren he story of st. george and the dragon hughes joanna mary boyce karl truppe kelmscort manor kelmscott mano la pia de' tolomei lady louis de taeye madox brown morris naked nude orient goods painting palazzo del padesta robert buchanan rossetti simeon solomon st. reparata stacy marks study the third reich's nu the rossetti family the seed of david working men's college áàëåò áåëûå ðîçû áîéñ ãàìëåò è îôåëèÿ ãîëóáü äàíòå ãàáðèýëü ðîññåòòè äæåéí ìîððèñ äæîàííà ìýðè æèâîïèñü èñêàòåëü èñêóññòâî êàðë òðóïï êåííåò êëàðê êîëåãîâà êðèñòèíà ðîññåòòè ëàðåö êîðîëÿ ðåíå? ëåìïèöêà ëåìïèöêàÿ ìàðèèíñêèé ìåíàäû ìîððèñ íàñèëèå íîæêè ïèÿ äå òîëîìåè ïðåðàôàýëèòû ðîìàí ðîññåòòè ñåêñ ñèääàë ñèìâîëèçì ñòèõè òî́ìàñ êàðëǻéëü óîëòåð õîóýëë äåâåðåëë ôàíè êîðíôîðò ôåòèø ôî́ðä ìý́äîêñ áðà́óí ôðèäåðèê ëåéòîí õàíò õüþç ÷ààäàåâ ÷àñîâíÿ ïîäåñòà ýãã ýäâàðä ýëèçàáåò ñèääàë
ÐÎÑÑÅÒÒÈ 1860 |
Äíåâíèê |
ÐÎÑÑÅÒÒÈ 1860
The work known under this title was originally planned to be the central panel of a triptych that was to adorn a cabinet belonging to William Morris.
Ðàáîòà ïåðâîíà÷àëüíî ïëàíèðîâàëàñü êàê öåíòðàëüíàÿ ÷àñòü òðèïòèõà äëÿ óêðàøåíèÿ äâåðåé øêàôà â äîìå Óèëüÿìà Ìîððèñà. Îíà îñòàëàñü íåçàêîí÷åííîé.
The flanking panels depicted (on the left) Dante's meeting with Beatrice in Florence, recorded in the Vita Nuova chapter 3, and (on the right) Dante's meeting with Beatrice recorded in the Purgatorio Canto XXX. The central panel was not completed, however, although DGR did finish a pen and ink drawing in which all the elements of the original conception are depicted. This drawing is now in the Birmingham City Museum and Art Gallery. The unfinished oil on panel is in the Tate Gallery, and there is a pencil study on the verso of the unfinished watercolor of The Gate of Memory.
The work is completely symbolic. The central figure is Love who is holding a sundial. In the finished drawing this figure wears a pilgrim's hat, an accoutrement that recalls Dante's preoccupation with the idea of the pilgrim (see especially the Vita Nuova chapters 40-41). He stands against a hieratic background divided along a diagonal running from upper right to lower left. In the upper left quadrant is the head of Christ, figured as the sun, looking down across a heavily stylized field of sun rays that emanate from the circle containing his head. His gaze is directed toward the figure of Beatrice, whose face is inscibed in a crescent moon in the lower right quadrant against a background of stars.
The picture is a symbolistic representation of the death of Beatrice and the meaning of that death. As the central panel of the projected triptych, that death stood “between” the two salutations given to Dante by Beatrice. Grieve says that the picture “represents the essential truth of both the Vita Nuova and the Divina Commedia, that Love is the generating force of the universe” (see the 1984 Tate catalogue The Pre-Raphaelites, 179). In his left hand the figure of Love holds a bow and arrow, in his right the sundial which points at the ninth hour, the hour of Christ's and of Beatrice's death alike. Ainsworth says that the work specifically illustrates the Vita Nuova chapter XXVIII, “when the Lord God of justice called my most gracious lady unto Himself” (see Ainsworth, “DGR's ‘Dantis Amor,’” 72).
The work is deeply literary, its most obvious reference point being the last line of Dante's Paradiso (“L'Amor che muove il sole e l'altre stelle”. Almost equally important is the Vita Nuova, as the inscription surrounding Christ's head indicates (“qui est per omnia seacula benedictus”); these are the concluding lines of Dante's spiritual autobiography. In its completed form, as the finished drawing at Birmingham shows, Beatrice's head was to have been circled with the immediately preceding words from Dante's autobiography: “quella beata Beatrice che mira continualmente nella faccia di colui.”
The title has a double significance, with the genitive case signalling both Dante's love (for Beatrice, for Love, for God) and Rossetti's (for Dante as the emblem of visionary art, and for Love as idea and experience). DGR's work is a move to re-imagine Dante's love-ideal in a secondary devotional act. As in his various pastiche texts—in this case the reference would be to “Piangendo star con l'anima smarrita”— the picture involves a kind of magical act whose aim is to recover Dante's spiritual values for a more secular world. In DGR's case, art becomes not so much the vehicle of those values as their incarnation.
For further information see the commentary for the Tate Gallery oil.
Production History DGR went to the Morris's house in Upton in October 1860 to do this picture. The drawing on the back of The Gate of Memory may have been done at that time, though Ainsworth thinks it is a later production (see Ainsworth, “DGR's ‘Dantis Amor,’” 70). The finished drawing dates from 1860 as well. Left unfinished at that time, the oil picture was returned to DGR in 1863 and worked on again. When it was sold to the dealer Gambart in 1865 DGR had it placed in its striking frame.
Literary The text directly related to this picture is Dante's “Sonnet. On the ninth of June 1290”. Electronic Archive Edition: 1 Source File: s117.raw.xml
Description: The central figure in this picture is Love, who is holding what would have been a sundial (if the picture had been completed). He stands against a decorative background divided along a diagonal running from upper right to lower left. In the upper left quadrant is the head of Christ, figured as the sun, looking down across a heavily stylized field of sun rays that emanate from the circle surrounding his head. His gaze is directed toward the figure of Beatrice, whose face is inscribed in a crescent moon in the lower right quadrant against a background of stars.
This picture, which was not completed, was to have been the central panel of three for a cabinet at William Morris's Red House, Bexley Heath. The cabinet is still there, but some time before August 1863, the two finished panels were removed and made into a diptych with a narrow central separator where a schematic form of the figure of Love (as depicted in this work) appears. This two-panel work is The Salutation of Beatrice,
Îïèñàíèå: öåíòðàëüíîé ôèãóðîé íà ýòîé êàðòèíå ÿâëÿåòñÿ Ëþáîâü, äåðæàùàÿ òî, ÷òî áóäü êàðòèíà çàêîí÷åíà, ñòàëî áû öèôåðáëàòîì ñîëíå÷íûõ ÷àñîâ. Îí (ëþáîâü â àíãëèéñêîì ìóæñêîãî ðîäà) ñòîèò íà äåêîðàòèâíîì ôîíå, ðàçäåë¸ííîì ïî äèàãîíàëè ñïðàâà íàëåâî.  ëåâîì âåðõíåì êâàäðàíòå èçîáðàæåíà ãîëîâà Õðèñòà â âèäå Ñîëíöà, ãîëîâà ñìîòðèò ÷åðåç ñòèëèçîâàííûå ëó÷è, èñõîäÿùèå èç îêðóæàþùåãî å¸ êðóãà. Åãî âçãëÿä íàïðàâëåí íà Áåàòðè÷å, ÷ü¸ ëèöî ïîìåùåíî â ñåðï ìåñÿöà è ðàñïîëîæåíî â íèæíåì ïðàâîì êâàäðàíòå íà ôîíå çâ¸çä. Ýòà êàðòèíà, êîòîðàÿ íå áûëà çàâåðøåíà, äîëæíà áûëà ñòàòü öåíòðàëüíîé ïàíåëüþ òðèïòèõà äëÿ êàáèíåòà Êðàñíîãî äîìà Âèëüÿìà Ìîððèñà. Êàáèíåò è ñåé÷àñ òóò, íî ïåðåä àâãóñòîì 1863 ãîäà äâå çàêîí÷åííûå ïàíåëè áûëè ïðåâðàùåíû â äèïòèõ ñ ðàçäåëÿþùåé ïàíåëè ñõåìàòè÷åñêè èçîáðàæåííîé ôèãóðîé Ëþáâè. Ýòî äèïòèõ The Salutation of Beatrice.
This unfinished work was intended to be the center panel of the cabinet at Red House from which The Salutation of Beatrice was later removed.
Love, dressed as a pilgrim, holds a sundial dated 1290, the year of Beatrice's death.The central figure in this picture is Love, who is holding what would have been a sundial (if the picture had been completed). He stands against a decorative background divided along a diagonal running from upper right to lower left. In the upper left quadrant is the head of Christ, figured as the sun, looking down across a heavily stylized field of sun rays that emanate from the circle surrounding his head. His gaze is directed toward the figure of Beatrice, whose face is inscribed in a crescent moon in the lower right quadrant against a background of stars.This picture is the finished design for the oil painting, but its details are more elaborated.
Included Text The three inscriptions are all from Dante: the first two come from the concluding sentence of the Vita Nuova; the third from the last line of the Paradiso. QUI EST PER OMNIA SAECULA BEN BENEDICTUS QUELLA BEATA BEATRICE CHE MIRA CONTINUALMENTE NELLA FACIA DI COLUIL'AMOR CHE MUOVE IL SOLE E L'ALTRE STELLE Note: The first inscription surrounds the head of Christ; the second surrounds the head of Beatrice; the third runs along the dividing diagonal.
Annie Miller 1860Annie miller 1860 Ýòîò ðèñóíîê íàïîìèíàåò ïî ñòèëþ ñåðèþ ïîðòðåòîâ, íà÷àòûõ Ðîññåòòè â 1858 ãîäó (Jane Morris, ruth Herbert, Fanny Cornforth). Ïîðòðåòû âîñïåâàþò æåíñêóþ êðàñîòó (â ïîíèìàíèè ïðåðàôàýëèòîâ), ïîä÷¸ðêèâàåòñÿ äëèíà øåè, ÷¸òêèé ïðîôèëü, "ãóáû Êóïèäîíà", òÿæåëûå âåêè, îáèëèå âüþùèõñÿ âîëîñ. Íà Ìèëëåð õîòåë æåíèòüñÿ Õàíò è òîëüêî ïîñëå òîãî, êàê ïîìîëâêà áûëà ðàñòîðãíóòà â 1859 ãîäó îíà ñíîâà ïîñòóïèëà â ïîëüçîâàíèå âñåõ ïðåðàôàýëèòîâ â êà÷åñòâå ìîäåëè. The picture is a symbolistic representation of the death of Beatrice and the meaning of that death. As the central panel of the projected triptych, that death stood between the two salutations given to Dante by Beatrice, the one in the Vita Nuova (see chapter III), the other in the Purgatorio Canto XXX. Grieve says that the picture, “represents the essential truth of both the Vita Nuova and the Divina Commedia, that Love is the generating force of the universe” (see Tate 1984, 179). In his left hand the figure of Love holds a bow and arrow, in his right an (unfinished) sundial; the latter would have pointed to the ninth hour, the hour of Christ's and of Beatrice's death alike. The time is represented in the versions of this picture that are complete. Ainsworth says that the picture specifically illustrates the Vita Nuova, chapter XXVIII, “when the Lord God of justice called my most gracious lady unto Himself”
Ëàðåö êîðîëÿ Ðåíå, èëè Ëàðåö «Ìåäîâûé ìåñÿö êîðîëÿ Ðåíå» — ñîçäàííûé â 1860—1862 ãîäàõ êîìïàíèåé Óèëüÿìà Ìîððèñà ëàðåö èç äóáà, èíêðóñòèðîâàííîãî äðóãèìè âèäàìè äðåâåñèíû ñ èëëþñòðèðîâàííûìè ïàíåëÿìè àâòîðñòâà Äàíòå Ãàáðèýëÿ Ðîññåòòè, Ýäâàðäà Á¸ðí-Äæîíñà, Ôîðäà Ìýäîêñà Áðàóíà è Âýëà Ïðèíñåïà. Ïàíåëè èëëþñòðèðóþò ðîìàíòè÷åñêóþ èñòîðèþ êîðîëÿ Ðåíå Àíæóéñêîãî è åãî âòîðîé ñóïðóãè Æàííû äå Ëàâàëü; ïî áîëüøåé ÷àñòè õóäîæíèêè ðóêîâîäñòâîâàëèñü èçîáðàæåíèåì êîðîëÿ â ðîìàíå Âàëüòåðà Ñêîòòà «Êàðë Ñìåëûé, èëè Àííà Ãåéåðøòåéíñêàÿ, äåâà Ìðàêà».  íàñòîÿùåå âðåìÿ õðàíèòñÿ â ñîáðàíèè Ìóçåÿ Âèêòîðèè è Àëüáåðòà.
Íàçâàíèå ýòîãî ëàðöà, âîçìîæíî íàìåðåííî, ââîäèò â çàáëóæäåíèå: ýòî íå ñîáñòâåííî «Ëàðåö êîðîëÿ Ðåíå» (ïðèíàäëåæàâøèé åìó), à ïîïûòêà ñîçäàòü âîîáðàæàåìûé îáúåêò — ëàðåö, êîòîðûé êîðîëü ìîã áû çàêàçàòü äëÿ ñåáÿ è ñâîåé ñóïðóãè Æàííû äëÿ ìåäîâîãî ìåñÿöà (ïîäîáíûé ëàðåö íèêîãäà íå óïîìèíàëñÿ Âàëüòåðîì Ñêîòòîì).
Äæîíñîì, Äàíòå Ãàáðèýëü Ðîññåòòè ñîçäàë «Ìóçûêó» (ïî êîòîðîé îí ïîçæå ñîçäàñò ïîëíîöåííóþ êàðòèíó) è «Ñàäîâîäñòâî»
Dante Gabriel Rossetti - King René's Honeymoon - Gardening - Design for a painted Panel for the Cabinet
Ìåòêè: ëàðåö êîðîëÿ ðåíå? |
Ñòðàíèöû: | [1] |