
Titian · PD
Venus Anadyomene
Details
The story
Titian painted this around 1520, when he was the rising star of Venice and the city was hungry for the ancient world. The pose comes from a lost painting described by writers of Roman times, a Venus born from the sea, and its name simply means Venus rising. She stands in shallow water, wringing the sea from her long reddish hair, a small shell floating beside her as a quiet reminder of how she was born. The old Greek and Roman version was famous but gone for over a thousand years. Titian is not copying a statue here; he gives her warm, living skin and a slow, unhurried turn of the body. The canvas later travelled through some of the great collections of Europe, including that of Queen Christina of Sweden, before reaching Edinburgh.




