Diana and Endymion (Langlois)
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| Diana and Endymion | |
|---|---|
| French: Diane et Endymion | |
| Artist | Jérôme-Martin Langlois |
| Year | 1822 |
| Medium | Oil-on-canvas |
| Movement | Neoclassical style |
| Subject | Roman goddess Diana (mythology) |
| Dimensions | 320 cm × 211 cm (126 in × 83 in) |
| Location | Private collection |
| Owner | Possibly Madonna |
Diana and Endymion, also known in French as Diane et Endymion, is an 1822 oil-on-canvas painting by Jérôme-Martin Langlois. The painting depicts the Roman goddess Diana, one of the twelve Gods and Goddesses of Olympus, falling in love with Endymion and is painted in the Neoclassical style.
The painting is by French artist Jérôme-Martin Langlois.[1] It was displayed to acclaim at the Salon of 1819 and was completed in 1822 having been commissioned by Louis XVIII for his Salon of Diane at the Palace of Versailles.[2][1] The French Third Republic acquired the work in 1873, and it was displayed at the Musée de Picardie in Amiens from 1878. It was believed that the work was destroyed in the bombing of Amiens in 1918 during World War I.[1] The painting had been part of the collection of the museum that had been evacuated to the Louvre in Paris for safekeeping.[1] The painting was missing from the works that were returned to Amiens from the Louvre after the end of the war.[1] It was initially described as "untraceable since the return of the 1918 removed works" and subsequently as "destroyed by the falling of a bomb on the museum".[1]
An engraving of Langlois's Diana and Endymion was submitted by M. Muller to the French National Institute in 1843.[3]
Description
The painting is painted in the Neoclassical style and it is a depiction of one of the twelve Gods and Goddesses of Olympus: the Roman goddess Diana. She is falling in love with Endymion.[4]
The painting is an oil-on-canvas and its dimensions are 320 cm (130 in) x 211 cm (83 in).[5] In the painting just above a sleeping Endymion is a flying cupid. Suspended in the air above and to the left of cupid is Diana with a quiver on her back. Diana appears to be admiring the sleeping Endymion. Endymion is sleeping with his right arm behind his head. In his left hand he holds a spear. He is resting on a tiger skin and there is a dog lying at his feet.[5]