Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Landscape with the Ashes of Phocion

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Year
  
1648

Artist
  
Location
  
Periods
  
Baroque, Classicism

Medium
  
Dimensions
  
1.16 m x 1.78 m

Created
  
1648

Media
  
Canvas, Oil paint

Landscape with the Ashes of Phocion lh3ggphtcom5DCRgpdyQ4KpXbUUwfM6iHnguajE0pFnEN6V

Similar
  
Nicolas Poussin artwork, Classicism artwork, Oil paintings

Landscape with the Ashes of Phocion is a 1648 painting, also known as Landscape with the Ashes of Phocion (Collected by His Widow) and The Ashes of Phocion Collected by his Widow, by French artist Nicolas Poussin. Phocion was an Athenian statesman from the 4th century BC.

"It is a picture about exile. Phocion, an Athenian general, was falsely condemned and executed, and his unburied corpse banished, and taken to the outskirts of Megara where it was burnt. At the very front his faithful widow gathers up his ashes. Her servant keeps look out. And the outcasts are placed directly below the mighty nucleus of temple-rock-cloud. But nothing in the scene indicates that the civilisation from which they're excluded is itself evil, corrupt or doomed, that they're well out of it. No, their exile from the good life is sheer tragedy. The majestic symphony of the city continues undiminished." The painting is housed at the Walker Art Gallery, part of the National Museums Liverpool, England.

The same year Poussin painted a companion piece to Landscape with the Ashes of Phocion, The Funeral of Phocion, in three versions.

References

Landscape with the Ashes of Phocion Wikipedia