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Et in Arcadia ego (Guercino)

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Et in Arcadia ego
ArtistGiovanni Francesco Barbieri (Guercino)
Year1618–1622
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions81 cm × 91 cm (32 in × 36 in)
LocationGalleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica, Rome

Et in Arcadia ego (also known as The Arcadian Shepherds) is an oil-on-canvas painting created c. 1618–1622 by the Italian Baroque artist Giovanni Francesco Barbieri (Guercino). It is now on display in the Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica of Rome.

Description

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The painting shows two young shepherds staring at a skull, with a mouse and a blowfly, placed onto a cippus with the words "Et in Arcadia ego" (Also in Paradise I am). This phrase is meant as a warning, that even in Arcadia/Paradise, death is always present. The phrase appears for the first time in art and architecture in this work. The iconography of the memento mori theme symbolised in art by the skull was rather popular in Rome and Venice since Renaissance times.

Elias L. Rivers suggested the phrase "Et in Arcadia ego" is derived from a line from Daphnis' funeral in Virgil's Fifth Eclogue Daphnis ego in silvis ("Daphnis was I amid the woods"), and that it referred to the dead shepherd within the tomb, rather than Death itself.[1]

Mentioned for the first time in the collection of Antonio Barberini in 1644, the painting was later acquired by Colonna of Sciarra (1812), being attributed to Bartolomeo Schedoni until 1911. Nicolas Poussin also made two paintings on the topic of Et in Arcadia ego, less than two decades later.

The painting is connected with Guercino's The Flaying of Marsyas by Apollo in Palazzo Pitti (1618), where the same group of shepherds is present.

In literature and pop culture

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Hans Christian Andersen's "Improvisatoren" (1835) in chapter 13 two of the main characters discuss the painting, reflecting the attribution to Schedoni believed at that time.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Elias L. Rivers, "Foreword", to Bruno Mario Damiani, Bárbara Louise Mujica, Et In Arcadia Ego: Essays on Death in the Pastoral Novel (Lanham and New York: University Press of America, 1990). ISBN 0-8191-7772-5
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