Marcus Stone - The Lovers
Marcus Stone - The Lovers
SKU:egri001
Oil, 36x26, year 1872
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Characteristics
Characteristics
Certificato: Yes
Formato: Small (under 40cm)
Orientamento: Horizontal
Supporto: Canvas
Soggetto: Historical
Stile: Figurative
Description of the work
Description of the work
The work offers an extraordinary example of 19th-century history painting in the Romantic style. After the Neoclassical era, which focused on classical Greek and Roman traditions, the Romantic reaction brought new elements of study and interest. Romanticism, in fact, extolled the virtues of the human spirit, and this was also expressed in a celebration of, and related interest in, the genius of individual peoples. This means that, from the late 18th century and throughout the 19th, the new Romantic aesthetic fostered the study of and interest in the traditions and history of peoples. Hence the widespread use of medieval historical subjects, which concerned the vicissitudes of communes or the exaltation of heroic figures contrasting with political situations of tyranny and oppression. In Marcus Stone's case, historicist and medieval inspiration was channeled into his usual production of sentimental genre scenes, giving these subjects a distinctively Romantic definition.
The nature of the work is also perfectly in keeping with the context of medieval historicist painting. Already from the composition, we can detect elements typical of that pictorial genre. We have already mentioned the tone of the scene, marked by the expression of an intensely pathetic sentimentality typical of medieval reenactments of the Romantic era, aimed at exalting the passions and virtues of the soul. Another peculiarity is the eminently didactic nature of the overall setting: the scene is narrated with extreme clarity, with a highly accentuated and even subtly idealized flair in the description of the costumes and the setting. Even from a more strictly stylistic perspective, the prerogatives of 19th-century historicist painting are respected in the development of a style that clearly harks back to the great period of the Italian Renaissance, to Raphael and Titian in particular. This is understood in the pursuit of a perfect naturalistic rendering, as well as a perfect atmospheric fusion of the subjects in space, which the artist achieves thanks to the extraordinary quality of his technique. Compared to sixteenth-century painting, however, some differences must be noted that make this work peculiarly romantic, namely a certain dissolution of form, achieved through a synthetic pictorial layering, typically nineteenth-century.
Marcus Stone was an English painter, born in 1840 and died in 1921. Trained by his father, he began exhibiting at the Royal Academy before the age of eighteen. A few years later, he illustrated, with great success, the books of Charles Dickens, Anthony Trollope, and other writers who were friends of his family. Stone was elected an Associate of the Royal Academy in 1877 and an Academician in 1887. His early paintings were inspired by historical events, but in his later works he focused primarily on genre scenes with a delicate sentimentality. One of his works is held at the Tate Gallery in London.
Shipping and returns
Shipping and returns
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