Renaissance art
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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The Three Graces
In Renaissance art, the Roman statue group of the three graces in the Piccolomini library in Duomo di Siena inspired most themes. The Charites are depicted together with several other mythological figures in Sandro Botticelli's painting Primavera (above right). Raphael also pictured them in a painting now housed in Chantilly in France. Among other artistic depictions, they are the subject of famous sculptures by Antonio Canova and Bertel Thorvaldsen.
A group of three trees in the Calaveras Big Trees State Park are named "The Three Graces" after the Charites.
- List of artwork with images resembling encircled graces
- Ambrogio Lorenzetti (1348-50) Allegory of Good Government [1]
- Cosimo Tura (1476-84) detail of Allegory of April [2]
- Sandro Botticelli (1482); detail of Primavera; [3]
- Antonio da Correggio (1518); [4]
- Raphael Sanzio [5]
- Jacopo Pontormo (1535) [6]
- Hans Baldung Grien (1540)
- Jaques Blanchard (1631-33) Man surprising Sleeping Venus and Graces[7]
- Peter Paul Rubens [8]
- Cezanne
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