Phaedria and Cymochles

Painting by William Etty From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Phaedria and Cymochles is an 1832 oil painting by the British artist William Etty. It depicts a scene inspired by the epic poem The Faerie Queene by the Elizabethan writer Edmund Spenser. Cymochles, a moral knight on a quest, is lured onto a boat by the temptress Phaedria.

Year1832
Dimensions62.5 cm × 76 cm (24.6 in × 30 in)
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Phaedria and Cymochles
ArtistWilliam Etty
Year1832
TypeOil on canvas, history painting
Dimensions62.5 cm × 76 cm (24.6 in × 30 in)
LocationPrinceton University Art Museum, New Jersey
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As with much of Etty's work it combines history painting with nude art.The painting was displayed at the Royal Academy Exhibition of 1832 at Somerset House in London, the smallest of the works he sent in that year.[1] He submitted a later variation of the painting Phaedria and Cymochles on the Idle Lake to the Royal Academy Exhibition of 1835.[2] The original is now owned by Princeton University Art Museum in New Jersey[3]

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