Vulcan Presenting Venus with Arms for Aeneas (Boucher)
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Artist | François Boucher |
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Year | 1757 |
Dimensions | 320 cm × 320 cm (130 in × 130 in) |
Location | Louvre, Paris |
Vulcan Presenting Venus with Arms for Aeneas (French: Les Forges de Vulcain) is an oil-on-canvas painting by François Boucher, executed in 1757 and now in the Louvre in Paris.[1][2] He produced it as the basis for one of a set of tapestries on The Loves of the Gods.[2] It depicts the homely but muscular Vulcan on the ground in the right, offering up to the more celestial Venus the weapons he has forged for her son Aeneas.
See also
- Apollo in the Forge of Vulcan (1630) by Diego Velázquez in the Prado Museum, Madrid
- Venus at the furnace of Vulcan (1710) by Luigi Garzi at the Palazzo Buonaccorsi, Macerata
References
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- ↑ Base Joconde: Reference no. 000PE000196, French Ministry of Culture. Script error: No such module "In lang".
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Les forges de Vulcain ou Vulcain présentant à Vénus des armes pour Énée, Louvre collections
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- 1757 paintings
- Paintings in the Louvre by French artists
- Mythological paintings by François Boucher
- Paintings of Venus
- Paintings based on the Aeneid
- Paintings of Vulcan (mythology)