1910
Oil on canvas
Carina was painted during Godward's brief stay in Rome in 1910, when he was making plans to move more permanently to Italy. According to a letter in the Milo-Turner collection, Carina was completed before December 1910 when the artist was at work upon the larger Noonday Rest.
Carina is a fine example of the bust length portrait heads in which Godward's superior rendering of warm skin tones, cool marble and diaphanous fabric, are expressed in their most condensed and abstract form. Unlike Sir Lawrence Alma Tadema, Frederic, Lord Leighton and Edward Poynter, whose half-length depictions of Grecian ladies, almost always portray historical or mythological heroines, Godward's pictures are less formal and represent a type of feminine beauty rather than a specific identity. The choice of title, derived from the name of the Classical virgin of the ancient kingdom of Caria in western Asia Minor, is merely a reflective glance to the austerity of Antiquity. The name Carina suggests the purity of devotional virginity, but also the humid sensuality of the exotic East. However, this is secondary to the decorative harmonies of flower-tinted colour and graceful sensual form. Godward's aims were to paint a more aesthetic form of Classicism, free of narrative and action and concentrated upon the beauty of form and colour. Of the small number of painters who continued to paint loosely classical subjects into the twentieth century, Godward was arguably the most successful and accomplished.
Why settle for a paper print when you can add sophistication to your rooms with a high quality 100% hand-painted oil painting on canvas at wholesale price? Order this beautiful oil painting today! that's a great way to impress friends, neighbors and clients alike.