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1634 (ca.), Nicolas Poussin, The Abduction of the Sabine Women -- Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York)

From the museum label: This painting embodies Poussin's innovations derived from studying Roman antiquity. Figural groups, several closely based on ancient sculptures, evoke the choreography of dancers caught mid-action on stage, while the complex interplay of drapery woven between the figures reveals Poussin as a master colorist. Poussin arranged wax figures in a tiny, theater-like box to establish the sophisticated spatial relationships and formal balance of such paintings. The violent subject comes from a founding myth for the city of Rome: Romans invited the neighboring Sabines to a festival with the intention of forcibly capturing their women as wives. When the Roman leader Romulus raised his cloak--seen here at left--his warriors seized them. This painting belonged to the French ambassador to Rome in the 1630s and then to King Louis XIII's chief minister, Cardinal Richelieu.

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Uploaded on November 19, 2023
Taken on November 19, 2023