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Nymphs and Satyr

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Year
  
1873 (1873)

Created
  
1873

Medium
  
oil on canvas

Period
  
Neoclassicism

Support
  
Canvas

Nymphs and Satyr Nymphs and Satyrs 1637 1640 Peter Paul Rubens WikiArtorg

Dimensions
  
260 cm × 180 cm (100 in × 71 in)

William-Adolphe Bouguereau artwork
  
Dante and Virgil, Evening Mood, The First Mourning, The Shepherdess, The Nut Gatherers

Nymphs and satyr bouguereau master study timelapse


Nymphs and Satyr (French: Nymphes et un satyre) is a painting, oil on canvas, created by artist William-Adolphe Bouguereau in 1873.

Contents

Nymphs and Satyr 123infinity of Konstantin Makovsky artSatyr and Nymph art

Nymphs and Satyr was exhibited in Paris in 1873, a year before the Impressionists mounted their first exhibition. Purchased by the American art collector and speculator John Wolfe, it was displayed in his mansion for many years alongside other high-style French academic paintings. It was sold at auction in 1888, after which the painting was displayed in the bar of the Hoffman House Hotel, New York City until 1901, when it was bought and stored in a warehouse, the buyer hoping to keep its 'offensive' content from the public. Robert Sterling Clark discovered the piece in storage and acquired it in 1942. The piece is currently on display at the Clark Art Institute located in Williamstown, Massachusetts.

According to the Clark Institute, in the painting "a group of nymphs have been surprised, while bathing in a secluded pond, by a lascivious satyr. Some of the nymphs have retreated into the shadows on the right; others, braver than their friends, are trying to dampen the satyr's ardor by pulling him into the cold water -- one of the satyr's hooves is already wet and he clearly wants to go no further. Bouguereau’s working methods were traditional; he made a number of sketches and drawings of carefully posed human figures in complicated interconnected poses, linking them together in this wonderfully rhythmical composition."

Nymphs and Satyr and Satyrs by Sebastiano Ricci

In the exhibition of 1873 it was displayed along with a verse from the ancient Roman poet, Publius Statius: “Conscious of his shaggy hide and from childhood untaught to swim, he dares not trust himself to deep waters.”

Nymphs and Satyr 1000 images about Faunalia on Pinterest Sculpture Nymphs and

The painting, the largest and one of the most beloved of the Clark collection, was cleaned prior to March 10, 2012 with the help of a grant from the Parnassus Foundation, courtesy of Jane and Raphael Bernstein.

Nymphs and Satyr wwwbook530compaintingpic27015AdolpheWilliam

Nymphs and satyr by franco castelluccio


Nymphs and Satyr Nymphs and Satyr After Bouguereau by EleanorJenik on DeviantArt

Nymphs and Satyr Nicolas Poussin Nymph with Satyrs NG91 National Gallery London

References

Nymphs and Satyr Wikipedia