Chagall, Marc. (1887 - 1985). Le message biblique de Marc Chagall, 1967 - SIGNED POSTER. 196. Le Cantique des Cantiques, 1975, edition of 8,500 printed by Charles Sorlier, published by Mourlot, Paris, for the Société des Amis du Musée National Message Biblique Marc Chagall, Nice (Sorlier Posters, 142-3). Signed and dated "Marc Chagall 1976." in blue felt-tip pen l.r., dry stamp u.c. Color lithographic poster, sight size 29 x 19 1/2 in. (73.5 x 49.4 cm). Tipped to rear support and nicely presented in linen mat, with some undulation to the sheet and prior mounting remnants around the edges recto (not visible under matting).
This painting reproduced here is one of five in a cycle of works by the master French painter Marc Chagall. The collection beautifully illustrates the Song of Songs, a book from the Hebrew Bible that celebrates love and sexual desire between a man and a woman. Rather than illustrating the text, Chagall visually represents three themes from the book: the lyrical, the sacred, and the sensual. The Song has been interpreted in many ways, both as a love poem between a man and a woman and as an allegory representing the love between man and God. The betrothed couple become one as they ascend to the heavens, eye level with the angels. The figures watch over the workaday scene below—animals grazing, a woman carrying her load and a quaint town resting under the night sky.
This painting reproduced here is one of five in a cycle of works by the master French painter Marc Chagall. The collection beautifully illustrates the Song of Songs, a book from the Hebrew Bible that celebrates love and sexual desire between a man and a woman. Rather than illustrating the text, Chagall visually represents three themes from the book: the lyrical, the sacred, and the sensual. The Song has been interpreted in many ways, both as a love poem between a man and a woman and as an allegory representing the love between man and God. The betrothed couple become one as they ascend to the heavens, eye level with the angels. The figures watch over the workaday scene below—animals grazing, a woman carrying her load and a quaint town resting under the night sky.
Chagall, Marc. (1887 - 1985). Le message biblique de Marc Chagall, 1967 - SIGNED POSTER. 196. Le Cantique des Cantiques, 1975, edition of 8,500 printed by Charles Sorlier, published by Mourlot, Paris, for the Société des Amis du Musée National Message Biblique Marc Chagall, Nice (Sorlier Posters, 142-3). Signed and dated "Marc Chagall 1976." in blue felt-tip pen l.r., dry stamp u.c. Color lithographic poster, sight size 29 x 19 1/2 in. (73.5 x 49.4 cm). Tipped to rear support and nicely presented in linen mat, with some undulation to the sheet and prior mounting remnants around the edges recto (not visible under matting).
This painting reproduced here is one of five in a cycle of works by the master French painter Marc Chagall. The collection beautifully illustrates the Song of Songs, a book from the Hebrew Bible that celebrates love and sexual desire between a man and a woman. Rather than illustrating the text, Chagall visually represents three themes from the book: the lyrical, the sacred, and the sensual. The Song has been interpreted in many ways, both as a love poem between a man and a woman and as an allegory representing the love between man and God. The betrothed couple become one as they ascend to the heavens, eye level with the angels. The figures watch over the workaday scene below—animals grazing, a woman carrying her load and a quaint town resting under the night sky.
This painting reproduced here is one of five in a cycle of works by the master French painter Marc Chagall. The collection beautifully illustrates the Song of Songs, a book from the Hebrew Bible that celebrates love and sexual desire between a man and a woman. Rather than illustrating the text, Chagall visually represents three themes from the book: the lyrical, the sacred, and the sensual. The Song has been interpreted in many ways, both as a love poem between a man and a woman and as an allegory representing the love between man and God. The betrothed couple become one as they ascend to the heavens, eye level with the angels. The figures watch over the workaday scene below—animals grazing, a woman carrying her load and a quaint town resting under the night sky.