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Love and Psyche, 1788-1793: Antonio Canova

The document discusses Antonio Canova's sculpture Love and Psyche from 1788-1793. It describes the symbolism and composition of the work, including the geometric forms and positioning of the figures. It also outlines Canova's process for creating sculptures, from initial sketches to executing the final marble work.

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Janica Berba
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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
132 views2 pages

Love and Psyche, 1788-1793: Antonio Canova

The document discusses Antonio Canova's sculpture Love and Psyche from 1788-1793. It describes the symbolism and composition of the work, including the geometric forms and positioning of the figures. It also outlines Canova's process for creating sculptures, from initial sketches to executing the final marble work.

Uploaded by

Janica Berba
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Art Analysis

Antonio Canova
Love and Psyche, 1788-1793
One Theme, Several Interpretations
Artists in the Neoclassical Era were attracted to the subject of Love and Psyche
because its symbols allowed more refined philosophical interpretations with respect to
other mythological scenes. Canova himself returned to the theme several times in
the early part of his career, sculpting the figures not only on their own but also as they
contemplate a butterfly, in the work known as Love and Psyche Standing (1796). He
also completed two versions of Love and Psyche reclining, one of which is the piece we
see here, commissioned in 1787 and preserved in the Louvre Museum.
Inspired by the story taken from Apuleius’ The Golden Ass, the sculpture captures the
moment when Love, with a kiss, revives Psyche after she had been wrapped in a
cursed sleep for having gone against Venus’ orders and opened the box containing
some of the beauty belonging to Persephone, goddess and queen of the underworld.
The artist’s inspiration for the figuration probably came from wall drawings seen in
Pompei or from a Herculaneum painting of a faun and a Bacchante. Canova had al-
ready used that image for a preceding group of Venus Grieving for Adonis.

Figg. 1, 2, 3 Antonio Canova, Psyche Revived by Love’s Kiss, 1788-1793. Marble, 155x168 cm. Paris. Musée du Louvre.
View of the whole, compositional diagram (above) and detail (on the next page).

1 © Istituto Italiano Edizioni Atlas


Art Analysis
Structure and Symbolic Meaning
The marble grouping is constructed according
to a series of complex compositional ge-
ometries in which even the use of voids as-
sumes a formal valence similar to the sculpted
mass. The very narrow space separating the
lips of the two figures is the central point of
the entire composition, the point of intersection
between two diagonals that cross like an X.
One diagonal runs through Love’s body, from
his right wing tip to the toe of his foot while
the other, on the left, starts at his left wing tip
and runs down through Psyche’s body to the
drapery arranged along the base. Therefore
the two bodies are arranged along a diagonal
and form a pyramid structure that has been
drawn upwards by the triangular figure formed
by Love’s extended wings.
The composition’s centre focuses on another
geometric construction generated by the two
intersecting circles drawn by the lovers’ arms
inscribed inside two arches. One is formed by
Psyche’s body together with one of Cupid’s
wings, while the other is drawn by the god’s
right leg, Psyche’s left arm and by Cupid’s
other wing. The work’s structural complexity is
easily seen in a frontal viewing of the piece
but also it offers various new orientations as
the viewer circles around it. Seeing it from all
sides allows observers to fully gather corre-
spondences, different readings and points How Canova Worked
of view. The execution of a sculpture required various stages of work. The first was the
The sculpture reflects Wickelmann’s aes- one that Canova termed of “invention” and “arrangement” and it consisted in
thetic principles: Love and Psyche are cap- the creation and study of the subject via preparatory sketches. Canova’s sketches
tured in the moment before their lips meet in are hasty, general, and focused on finding the best solutions in the lines of profile
a lovers’ kiss, a moment charged with tension and in the relationships of plasticity and luminosity. This phase was followed by
the realisation of models in terracotta in which the artist evaluated the three-
which is purified of any passionate quality, of
dimensional rendering of his sketches. The models for Love and Psyche show us
any spontaneous emotion. The process of ab- Canova’s repeated attempts to achieve an ideal form through the exploration of
straction tends towards the achievement of new compositional solutions as well as via a tiring work of purification from the
an ideal form and harmony; it is rationally con- most immediate, realistic and passionate elements. Once the model was realised
ducted without, however, erasing all traces of on the same scale as the final artwork, a plaster cast was made. To transfer
a human, sensual and vital realm. This is best the plaster image to marble many metallic spots were marked as reference
seen in the soft rendering of the flesh of Psy- points. Once the plaster cast was placed next to the marble, the same points
che’s body and in the expressive tenderness were repeated on the block of stone via the use of compasses, pantographs, and
of Love’s gesture, as well as in the faces’ re- plumb-lines on a scale of 1:1. This method allowed a quite faithful transposition
strained tension. The art work was conceived and reproduction of the original design in plaster.
to have different layers of meaning. It can be The conclusive phase was reserved for Canova, who called it the “sublime
execution”, and that his process of idealising the statue’s parts, rendering them
seen as a representation of amor divinus, that
more sublime. This was the part of the process in which Canova used all of his
is the love that unifies divinity and mortal; as technical expertise to clean and polish the surfaces and forms, giving the statue
an idyllic representation of youth, represented its definitive aspect. Moreover the sculptor usually used a mixture of wax and
in its transparent innocence; but, on a deeper other substances to give the marble a slight coloration that evoked the flesh’s
level, it is also the symbol of the bond between softness and eliminated the stone’s shiny quality.
eros (love) and thanatos (death) in which the
loving embrace becomes the state of an al-
most mystical union (H. Honour).

Fig. 4 Antonio Canova, Love and Psyche.


Pencil on paper. Bassano del Grappa, Museo Civico.
Fig. 5 Antonio Canova, Love and Psyche, 1787.
Terracotta, 25x42x28 cm. Venice, Museo Correr.

2 © Istituto Italiano Edizioni Atlas

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