Giraffe and Two-Legged Dog Statue Set by Hieronymus Bosch 8.25H

PN# JB31
  • $58.00 USD

In Stock

A giraffe and a two-legged dog can be found on the left-hand panel of the Garden of Earthly Delights. They peacefully coexist with the other exotic animals in a fantastic paradise. In the foreground, where God is introducing Eve to Adam things are much less bucolic. The fall seems near.

THE GARDEN OF EARTHLY DELIGHTS
Hieronymus Bosch shows us how we mortal souls, arisen from earthly paradise, are on our way to the atrocious ordeals of hell via our unchaste lives on earth. The dark painting on the closed panels shows the Creation, surrounded by water, in accordance with medieval traditions.

ABOUT THIS REPRODUCTION STATUE SET:

Parastone, a renown European collectible figurine manufacturer, has masterfully brought to life this legendary iconic painting of the Two-Legged Fantasy Dog and Giraffe by late Medieval / early Renaissance artist Hieronymus Bosch, as an intricate 3D statue adaptation in the greatest detail.

  • Collectible quality, resin with hand-painted color details, matte and glossy finish.
  • Parastone Mouseion 3D Collection. (PN JB31)
  • Giraffe: 6 3/4 in H x 3 1/8 in W x 2 1/4 in D. Dog: 2 in H x 2 1/4 in W x 1 1/4 in D. Weight: 8 oz.

HIERONYMUS BOSCH
From an artistic point of view, the world famous brilliant forerunner of surrealism was, in his day, unique and radically different. Hieronymus (Jeroen for short) Bosch was born (ca. 1450-1516) during the transition from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance in s-Hertogenbosch, in the Duchy of Brabant. Bosch places visionary images in a hostile world full of mysticism, with the conviction that the human being, due to its own stupidity and sinfulness has become prey to the devil himself. He holds a mirror to the world with his cerebral irony and magical symbolism, sparing no one. He aims his mocking arrows equally well at the hypocrisy of the clergy as the extravagance of the nobility and the immorality of the people. Hieronymus Bosch's style arises from the tradition of the book illuminations (manuscript illustrations from the Middle Ages). The caricatured representation of evil tones down its terrifying implications, but also serves as a defiant warning with a theological basis.


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