Jacopo del Sellaio, c.1442 - 1493
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Special marriage chests - cassoni - were commissioned to commemorate a union, symbols of a family's wealth and status that were paraded through the streets to the bride's new home. A 19th century reconstruction in the Fitzwilliam Museum, left [M.29], shows what an entire cassone would have looked like. |
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The Fitzwilliam panel depicts the very journey that took place during a Florentine wedding: that of the bride from her father's house to the home of her new husband. Two bedchambers 'bookend' the action: that in which Psyche is conceived and born, left, and that which contains the marital bed, right. |
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Today, accustomed as we are to looking at photographs, we usually associate a single pictorial field with a single moment in time. The appearance of the same figure in the same scene, not divided by frames, might appear illogical. In the 18th century James Barry, the President of the Royal Academy in London, criticised as "'defective' [those] old painters who employed different points of time in the same view." But in Renaissance Italy continuous narrative was a much more familiar convention. We see it, for instance, on a 16th century maiolica dish in the Fitzwilliam, left [EC.30-1938]. This depicts another classical love story: Peleus' unconventional wooing of the nymph Thetis. |
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The hovering figure of Cupid on the viewers' left is balanced by the figure of Psyche being wafted from her mountain on the right. |
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The suitors who approach Psyche's house on the left correspond to Psyche and her sisters outside Cupid's palace on the right. |
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Information Branches (related to this work) |
Stories and Histories: Cupid and Psyche - Interactive
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