Love and Psyche, 1788-1793: Antonio Canova
Love and Psyche, 1788-1793: Antonio Canova
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).