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Sleep and his Half brother Death

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Year
  
1874

Artist
  
John William Waterhouse

Created
  
1874

Medium
  
Oil on canvas

Location
  
Private collection

Period
  
Romanticism

Sleep and his Half-brother Death httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Dimensions
  
70 cm × 91 cm (28 in × 36 in)

John William Waterhouse artwork
  
The Favourites of the Em, A Flower Stall, Consulting the Oracle

Sleep and his Half-brother Death is a painting by John William Waterhouse completed in 1874.

Waterhouse's first Royal Academy exhibit (submitted from his father's house at 1 Scarsdale Villas), it was painted after both his younger brothers died of tuberculosis.

Hypnos and Thanatos

The painting itself is a reference to the Greek gods Hypnos (sleep) and Thanatos (death) who, in the Greek mythology, were brothers. Despite their similar poses in the painting, the character in the foreground is bathed in light, while his brother is shrouded in darkness; the first therefore represents Sleep, the latter Death. The personification of Sleep clasps poppies, symbolic of narcosis and dreamlike-states.

References

Sleep and his Half-brother Death Wikipedia