Landscape with Psyche Outside the Palace of Cupid

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Landscape_with_Psyche_Outside_the_Palace_of_Cupid an entity of type: Thing

Paisaje con Psique en el exterior del palacio de Cupido, también conocido como El castillo encantado, es un cuadro realizado por el pintor francés del Barroco Claudio de Lorena. Mide 87 cm de alto y 151 cm de ancho, y está pintado al óleo sobre lienzo. Data de 1664 y se encuentra en la National Gallery de Londres. rdf:langString
Landscape with Psyche Outside the Palace of Cupid, or The Enchanted Castle, 1664, is a painting, oil on canvas, by Claude Lorrain in the National Gallery, London. It was commissioned by Lorenzo Onofrio Colonna, a Roman aristocrat. Its subject is taken from The Golden Ass (IV-VI), by Apuleius – the love story of Psyche the soul, and Cupid the god of love. It is not clear if Psyche sits in front of Cupid's castle before she meets him, or after he has abandoned her. The painting's popular English title, The Enchanted Castle, was first used in an engraving after the picture of 1782. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Paisaje con Psique en el exterior del palacio de Cupido
rdf:langString Landscape with Psyche Outside the Palace of Cupid
rdf:langString Landscape with Psyche Outside the Palace of Cupid
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rdf:langString The Enchanted Castle.jpg
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rdf:langString Landscape with Psyche Outside the Palace of Cupid
xsd:integer 1664
rdf:langString Paisaje con Psique en el exterior del palacio de Cupido, también conocido como El castillo encantado, es un cuadro realizado por el pintor francés del Barroco Claudio de Lorena. Mide 87 cm de alto y 151 cm de ancho, y está pintado al óleo sobre lienzo. Data de 1664 y se encuentra en la National Gallery de Londres.
rdf:langString Landscape with Psyche Outside the Palace of Cupid, or The Enchanted Castle, 1664, is a painting, oil on canvas, by Claude Lorrain in the National Gallery, London. It was commissioned by Lorenzo Onofrio Colonna, a Roman aristocrat. Its subject is taken from The Golden Ass (IV-VI), by Apuleius – the love story of Psyche the soul, and Cupid the god of love. It is not clear if Psyche sits in front of Cupid's castle before she meets him, or after he has abandoned her. The painting's popular English title, The Enchanted Castle, was first used in an engraving after the picture of 1782. The picture perhaps shows Psyche's enforced arrival in Cupid's Kingdom, when the Zephyr wafts her to 'deep valley, where she was laid in a soft grassy bed of most sweet and fragrant flowers'. After rest, she sees 'in the middest (sic) and very heart of the woods, well nigh at the fall of the river .... a princely edifice'. Lorrain's representation of Psyche is taken from an engraving by The Master of the Die that shows precisely this episode. Yet the melancholy of the picture suggests Psyche's grief after Cupid's abandonment when according to Apuleius she lamented and keened before throwing herself into the next running water where she drowned.
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