Plague is an 1898 painting in tempera by the Swiss symbolist artist Arnold Böcklin, held in the Kunstmuseum Basel. It exemplifies the artist's obsession with nightmares of war, pestilence and death. The painting shows Death riding on a bat-like winged creature who travels through a street in a medieval European town.
Plague | |
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Artist | Arnold Böcklin |
Year | 1898 |
Type | tempera on wood |
Location | Kunstmuseum Basel, Basel |
Plague is rendered mostly using shades of pale green, a colour often associated with decomposition. The other predominant tones are black and dull browns; for example, in the clothes worn by the figures shown in the mid-ground and background as they dive for safety before Death's path. The red cloth of the woman shown in the mid-foreground is the only vivid colour seen; she lies across the corpse of a woman who was also cut down.
Sources
edit- Eco, Umberto. On Ugliness. Rizzoli, 2007. ISBN 0-8478-2986-3