Giovanni Battista Tiepolo's 'An Allegory with Venus and Time'
Audio description
This is a description of 'An Allegory with Venus and Time' by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo, painted around 1754 to 1758. It is an oil painting on canvas, designed to be installed on a ceiling.
Today, this impressively large, oval-shaped painting is displayed vertically on a wall. It is almost three metres high, and nearly two metres across, with a narrow frame. However, to give a sense of how it would have looked on a ceiling, the upper part is tipped forwards, so the painting is angled down towards us.
The scene depicts a view of a sunlit sky, with the curve of a blue-green globe at the lowest edge. A stepped sequence of robust clouds, starting dark, becoming lighter, climb up to crisp blue sky. Nude figures are perched on them, swathed in fine drapery.
The picture is an allegory, the figures inspired by classical mythology representing abstract concepts, such as love and time. The main focus of the painting is centre left, where a pale-skinned, female nude sits in splendour on a cloud, upon sugary pink silk. More silvery grey silk is draped over her lap. She is Venus, Goddess of Love and Beauty. Her dark blonde hair is swept back from a smooth forehead. There are pearls around her throat, and an elegant twist through her youthful body: legs bent at the knee and falling to the left, her bare torso and breasts face front. Above her, the curved wheel of a golden chariot is partly visible in a cloud. Above that, on the right, three female nudes huddle on a cloud. These are The Three Graces, arms raised to scatter flowers.
Venus is looking down and to the right, following the line of her outstretched arm, towards the shadowy figure on the cloud below. Here sits a withered elderly male, with a long grey beard, looking up at Venus. He is nude, apart from the folds of blue and gold silk covering his loins and one of his legs. His large grey wings are raised behind his back. He represents Time, and he has a sand-timer tied to his waist, resting on the cloud behind him. On his lap, his bony hands cradle a baby who looks directly out at us. Venus is reaching down towards this newborn child, her fingers seeming to gently touch its head.
Time has set down his sythe. The handle has pierced the dark cloud below him, and its curved blade protrudes from the bottom. Nearby, the winged figure of an infant Cupid clutches his red quiver of love arrows.
At the very top of the painting, against the clear blue sky, two white doves join beaks, in what looks like a lover’s kiss.
This painting was intended to delight and add a flourish of decorative fancy to a grand Italian palace belonging to the Contarini family, possibly to celebrate the birth of a child. The new born sitting on the lap of the elderly Time, might be the mythological hero Aeneus, who was granted immortality. However, with a distinctive face, it could also be a portrait of a young Contarini heir. The allegory reminds us of the inevitable passage of time, and the shared desire for each new baby to have a long and prosperous life.