Abstract

The prospect of antiquity lies at the heart of Nicolas Poussin's painting. Yet the nature of Poussin's vision of the classical past, although much clarified by recent study, still awaits full definition. Poussin was the friend of scholars, and he used the fruits of their studies in his own work; but he was also a poet. Unlike many of his followers, Poussin was not mesmerized by learning. He was as awed as they were by the remains of classical greatness, but he never forgot the more important spirit which gave those monuments birth. It is my intent to shed some light on Poussin's apprehension of the classical spirit by examining one aspect of his approach to antiquity, the so-called archaeological element of his work. It has long been remarked that one of Poussin's chief preoccupations in creating the settings and incidental business of his paintings was the desire to reconstruct the archaeological aspect of the past, so that all details might be appropriate to the narrative.1 Blunt has discussed this in s...

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