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European Painting before 1900, Johnson Collection

Venus and Adonis

Made in France, Europe

c. 1740

Charles-Joseph Natoire, French, 1700 - 1777

Oil on canvas
37 3/8 x 46 7/8 inches (94.9 x 119.1 cm)

* Gallery 283, European Art 1500-1850, second floor

1989-3-2

Gift of the Friends of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1989

Label

The young hunter Adonis reassures the goddess Venus that she should not fear for his well-being as he sets out for the hunt. In fact, he will be killed by a wild boar. Venus's chariot at the right and the white doves at her feet help to identify the goddess. The flying cupid emphasizes the passionate nature of the lovers' dialogue.

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Provenance

Possibly de Vouge sale, Paillet, Paris, March 15, 1784 [1]. Possibly the Pallavicini Collection, Rome; sold to Freiherr Ferdinand Eduard von Stumm (1843-1925), Florence and Schloß Holzhausen, Hessen, Germany, early 1900s; sold to a private collection, Germany [2]; sold to Galerie Cailleux, Paris, by 1989; sold to PMA through the Friends of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, June 5, 1989. 1. Described as a "Départ d'Adonis pour la chasse", 94 x 118 cm. 2. The preceding provenance according to the dealer Cailleux (curatorial file). Von Stumm was the German ambassador to the court of Madrid from 1887-1892. Not in his estate sale, Gunther Deneke Auktionhaus, Berlin, October 4, 1932.


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