Circe Invidiosa Explained

Circe Invidiosa
Artist:John William Waterhouse
Year:1892
Medium:Oil on canvas
Height Metric:179
Width Metric:85
Metric Unit:cm
City:Adelaide
Museum:Art Gallery of South Australia

Circe Invidiosa is a painting by John William Waterhouse completed in 1892. It is his second depiction, after Circe Offering the Cup to Ulysses (1891), of the classical mythological character Circe. This particular mythological portrayal is based on Ovid's tale in Metamorphoses, wherein Circe turns Scylla into a sea monster, solely because Glaucus scorned the enchantress' romantic advances in hopes of attaining Scylla's love instead. Waterhouse later returned to the subject of Circe a third time with The Sorceress (1911). Circe Invidiosa is part of the collection of the Art Gallery of South Australia, which also owns Waterhouse's 1883 The Favourites of the Emperor Honorius.[1]

Description

The myth of Circe, Glaucus, and Scylla originates in Book XIV of Metamorphoses. The specific scene that Waterhouse bases this painting on occurs in lines 52–65 of the epic poem:

There was a cove,a little inlet shaped like a bent bow,a quiet place where Scylla, at midday,sought shelter when the sea and sky were hot;and, in midcourse, the sun scorched with full force,reducing shadows to a narrow thread.And Circe now contaminates this bay,polluting it with noxious poisons; thereshe scatters venom drawn from dreadful rootsand, three-times-nine times, murmurs an obscureand tangled maze of words, a labyrinth—the magic chant that issues from her lips.Then Scylla comes; no sooner has she plungedwaist-deep into the water than she sees,around her hips, the horrid barking shapes.[2]

Waterhouse's version similarly shows Circe floating over the water in the cove, pouring bright green poison into the pool below. Under her feet, Scylla's "barking shapes" already swirl in the bubbling depths below; the transformation is well underway. Neither Scylla's human form nor her monster form is the emphasis here. Rather, the power of Circe's grave face and tangible jealousy rules this scene, as the vivid colors swirl all around her figure.

Analysis

While this painting is an homage to Ovid, Waterhouse spins the classical in imaginative and poetic ways. Anthony Hobson describes the painting as being "invested with an aura of menace, which has much to do with the powerful colour scheme of deep greens and blues [Waterhouse] employed so well."[3] Those colors are "near stained glass or jewels," according to Gleeson White.[4] Judith Yarnall also echoes the sentiment about the colors and mentions an "integrity of line" in the painting. She says that taken as a pair, Waterhouse's first two Circes prompt the question: "is she goddess or woman?"[5] Circe Invidiosa exemplifies Waterhouse's experimentation with the femme fatale archetype, which pervaded an immense amount of late nineteenth-century art. However, Chris Woods argues that Waterhouse's portrayals of Circe are not wholly evil, destructive, or monstrous, much like one sees in paintings of female mythological figures by Gustave Moreau or other European Symbolists. In this painting, Circe becomes a tragic figure: she "cannot help what [she is] doing, and rather regret[s] it."[6]

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.artgallery.sa.gov.au/agsa/home/Collection/european_and_north_american_paintings_and_sculpture.html Art Gallery of South Australia: Collection
  2. Mandelbaum, Allen. 1995. The Metamorphoses of Ovid. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. Lines 52-65, page 475
  3. Hobson, Anthony. 1989. J. W. Waterhouse. Oxford: Phaidon Christie's. pages 48-49, 52.
  4. White, Gleeson. 1909. The Master Painters of Britain. International Studio. page 318.
  5. Yarnall, Judith. 1994. Transformations of Circe: The History of an Enchantress. University of Illinois Press. page 166
  6. Woods, Christopher. 1981. The Pre-Raphaelites. The Viking Press. page 144.