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Nature and Its Symbols

Lucia Impelluso

This reference guide includes chapters on plants, flowers, fruits, and animals of the earth, air, and water, as well as fantastical creatures such as centaurs, griffons, and dragons. The vivid illustrations, which include paintings and tapestries from some of the world's premier museums, are accompanied by texts that offer careful analyses of the artists' depictions of the natural world. Each entry discusses the symbolic significance of the particular plant, fruit, or animal portrayed, its mythic or literary origins, and the episodes or individuals associated with it. These salient points are also called out in summary form within each entry, making the information easily accessible.  

The reader discovers, for example, that the iris can represent Jesus or the purity of the Virgin Mary as well as the kings of France or the city of Florence. The monkey, which can be symbolic of the devil, heresy, or bad temper, is also associated with the three wise men who traveled to Bethlehem to pay homage to the infant Jesus.

By bringing to life the natural world as portrayed in art, this book will surely be an indispensable resource for museum visitors, art lovers, and students.

Lucia Impelluso is an architect and the author of Themes, Meanings, Symbols in Portraitureand Gods and Heroes in Art (Getty Publications, 2003).

Additional titles in this series.

384 pages
5 1/4 x 7 3/4 inches
400 color illustrations
ISBN 978-0-89236-772-6
paperback

Getty Publications
Imprint: J. Paul Getty Museum
Series: A Guide to Imagery

2004

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