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| The Spanish Girl in Reverie | |
| Washington Allston | |
| American | |
| 1831 | |
| On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in | |
| Gallery 759 | |
| When Allston first exhibited this painting at the Boston Athenaeum in 1831, he also displayed the poem, written by him, that inspired the composition. It told the romantic story of "Sweet Inez," who awaits on the spot of her betrothal for the return of her lover, Isidore, from war. Allston's image of Inez is ethereal and luminous--a favorite facial type in his work--and her body language reveals yearning, hope, and fear. Alone in an awesome landscape, she is caught in a moment of reverie and reflection. The artist's approach to the landscape created great interest due to his dematerialization of the solid mountainous forms via meticulous glazings of diaphanous color. | |
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