Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Sponsa de Libano

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Year
  
1891

Location
  
Walker Art Gallery

Media
  
Gouache, Tempera

Artist
  
Edward Burne-Jones

Created
  
1891

Sponsa de Libano httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Type
  
Gouache and tempera on paper

Dimensions
  
332.5 cm × 155.5 cm (130.9 in × 61.2 in)

Similar
  
Edward Burne-Jones artwork, Gouache, Other artwork

Veni sponsa de libano


Sponsa de Libano (The Bride of Lebanon) is a painting by the Pre-Raphaelite artist Edward Burne-Jones dated 1891.

The painting is based on extracts from the Song of Solomon in the Bible. "Come with me from Lebanon, my spouse ..." "Awake, O north wind; and come thou south; blow upon my garden ..." It shows the bride walking in the garden with female personifications of the two winds blowing towards her. On each side of the bride are white lilies, symbolising her virginity. The pose of the bride is inspired by Botticelli's figures. The painting is based on an earlier design by Burne-Jones for a tapestry.

Sponsa de Libano forms part of the Victorian collection in the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool, Merseyside, England. It is painted in gouache and tempera on paper and measures 332.5 centimetres (131 in) by 155.5 centimetres (61 in). The picture was purchased by the gallery in 1896. In the same year the gallery purchased a study for the painting. This had been prepared in about 1891, drawn in chalk on paper, and shows the head used for one of the winds. The model was a twelve-year-old Jewish girl, who modelled for both winds, and was told to "look wild and blow with your lips". The study is now held by the Lady Lever Art Gallery in Port Sunlight, Merseyside.

References

Sponsa de Libano Wikipedia