Baccanale davanti a un'erma

Nicolas Poussin · PD

Baccanale davanti a un'erma


Dettagli

Anno
1632
Tecnica
olio
Tipo
dipinto
Dimensioni
98 × 142,8 cm

La storia

Nicolas Poussin painted this in Rome around 1632, a French artist who had gone to Italy to steep himself in the ancient world. It shows nymphs and fauns dancing in a ring before a term, one of those old boundary posts carved as a bearded god and set at the edge of a field. The bodies are fuller and more solid than in his earlier Bacchic scenes, and the dancers are arranged in a shallow line, like carved figures running along the side of a Roman stone coffin. That was deliberate. Poussin spent his days drawing exactly those sarcophagi in Roman collections. One nymph squeezes grape juice onto two struggling boys while a third has already drunk himself to sleep. The picture has hung in London's National Gallery since 1826.

Baccanale davanti a un'erma — Nicolas Poussin — MuseScope