Francesca da Rimini, William Dyce, 1837

Francesca da Rimini, William Dyce, 1837

Dyce acknowledged this as one of the finest paintings he produced in edinburgh. Its subject was inspired by the ill-fated lovers described by dante in his epic poem the inferno. Francesca, married to an elderly and deformed husband gianciotto, read to his younger brother paolo and they fell in love. Gianciotto surprised the lovers and murdered them. He was originally included in dyce's composition. A hint of the tragic outcome is still suggested dramatically by the presence of gianciotto's disembodied hand at the left, a fortuitous result of the canvas trimmed to remove damage in 1882. [1]. Object Type: painting. Date: 1837. Dimensions: height: 1,420 mm (55.90 in); width: 1,760 mm (69.29 in). Medium: oil on canvas. Depicted People: Francesca da Rimini, Paolo Malatesta. Collection: Scottish National Gallery. William Dyce - Francesca da Rimini - Google Art Project
Edit image
Published by:
Creazilla
Author: William Dyce (1806–1864) Details on Google Art ProjectSource: commons.wikimedia.org

Loading...

0 downloads
Loading...
paintings by william dycescottish paintings in the scottish national galleryromantic paintings in the scottish national gallerypaolo e francesca1830s paintings of people1837 oil on canvas paintingscheckered floors in paintingskisses in paintingsmoon in paintingspaintings of couples sitting on outdoor benchespaintings of people with string instrumentspeople with books in artfrancesca da riminipaolo malatestapaintings in the national galleries of scotlandoil on canvasfrancesca da rimini, paolo malatestascottish national gallerywilliam dyce

MORE LIKE THIS

Creazilla logo
Over 10 million free graphic resources for content creators and designers.
© 2018 - 2025 Creazilla
Our resourcesAll imagesPhotosDigital illustrationsClipartIconsPNG ImagesEmojisSilhouettesTraditional Art3D ModelsVectorsFontsColor namesColor palettesGradientsAudioAnimationVideosTemplates
InformationAbout CreazillaTerms of useTech teamPrivacy policyLicence Information
FeedbackContact Us