Claude Lorrain, Landscape with Psyche outside the Palace of Cupid, 1664
National Gallery. Image source: National Gallery
“You know the Enchanted Castle, – it doth stand / Upon a rock, on the border of a Lake, /
Nested in trees….” (Epistle to Reynolds)
(FINAL) PART EIGHT
Claude’s Landscape with Psyche outside the Palace of Cupid, inspired by Apuleius’sstory, which Keats sourced for his Ode to Psyche, is a late work of the painter’s, an elegant baroque fantasy with less than the usual “incessant observation of nature” and quality of “Brightness [that] was the excellence of Claude, brightness independent on colour…the evanescent character of light”[1] that Constable valued above all other artistic attributes.
The picture’s shortcomings, its dark, sleeping stillness, as if waiting for someone to step in and breathe life into it, gave literary advantages to Keats. The glimpse of the stone…
View original post 1,255 more words
Thanks for sharing. A series of posts that deserve a wider distribution…
LikeLiked by 2 people
I couldn’t agree more, Olga.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Beautiful painting! I have just the place to hang it!! 🙂 Regards.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I think someone might have got there before you!
LikeLike