Sleeping Venus with Cupid (Poussin) explained

Sleeping Venus with Cupid
Year:1630
Height Metric:73.3
Width Metric:98.8
City:Dresden, Germany

Sleeping Venus with Cupid (or Sleeping Venus with Amor) is an oil on canvas painting by the French artist Nicolas Poussin. It was completed in 1630 and is now part of the collection of the Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister in Dresden, Germany.[1]

It depicts a naked Venus, the Roman goddess of love, sleeping under trees accompanied at her feet by her son Cupid with his bow and arrow. A putto sits at her side clutching more arrows. The brightly painted body of Venus in the foreground is set against a darkly painted rural background, in which two men are gazing lustfully at her from behind a tree and a pair of lovers are in the middleground.

The painting was executed during Poussin's time in Rome and displays Venetian influence. The theme of a sleeping Venus was popular with Renaissance artists such as Giorgione and Carracci.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ruhende Venus mit Amor. Staatlichen Kunstsammlungen Dresden. 28 June 2020.