Gustave Moreau's La Vie de L'humanité
Gustave Moreau's La Vie de L'humanité
Gustave Moreau's La Vie de L'humanité
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Vie de
Gustave Moreau's "La
in the
l'humanite":
Orpheus
Context of Religious
Syncretism
UniversalHistories,
and
Occultism
By Dorothy M. Kosinski
frequentlyperceivedas a degenerationor
negative unfolding-and a system of parallels between these ages of mankindand
the stages of the life of the individual.
oreau's paintinghas the imposing
appearance of an altar, the ten
images surrounded and unified by a
heavy gilt frame. The sequence of the
panels-nine rectangular images arranged in three rows of three panels
each, surmounted by the semicircular
lunette with the image of Christimplies a cyclical movement of history, a
disintegration redeemed by the victory
of the greatest initiate, the Resurrection
of Christ. The top row depicts Adam
and Eve: The Age of Gold-"Prayer,
"Ecstasy," and "Sleep"; the middle row
Orpheus: The Age of Silver--"Inspiration," "Song," and "Tears" (Figs. 2,3,
and 4); the bottom row Cain and Abel:
The Age of Iron-"Work," "Rest," and
"Death." The Greek myth of Orpehus
is, thus, sandwiched between two stories
from Genesis.
Moreau's own commentary on the
work focuses on the complex interrelationships of the panels. The painting is
intended to present the stages of mankind's development (golden age, silver
age, iron age) and the growth of the
individual (childhood, youth, maturity).
It is arranged, moreover, according to
the cycle of the day (morning, noon,
evening). Moreau also delineates more
subtle progressions:levels of religious or
spiritual concentration (prayer, ecstasy,
sleep), of artistic effort (inspiration,
song, tears), and of productive labor
(work, rest, death).
The development and increasing sophistication of mankind, the movement
from primitive to civilized state, is
viewed as a gradual deterioration, a fall
Spring 1987
Fig. 2
Fig. 3
Fig. 1 Gustave Moreau, La Vie de l'humanite, 1886, oil on wood, nine panels,
each: 33.5 x 25.5 cm; lunette, 37 x 94 cm. Paris, Mus6e Gustave Moreau.
Fig. 2 Gustave Moreau, "Le matin, L'inspiration,"panel from La Vie de
l'humanite.
Fig. 3 Gustave Moreau, "Le midi, Le chant," panel from La Vie de l'humanite.
Fig. 4 Gustave Moreau, "Le soir, Les larmes," panel from La Vie de l'Humanite.
from grace, a corruption of innocence.
The sequence within the vertical columns expresses this process of degeneration: from prayer to inspiration to work;
from ecstasy to song to rest; from sleep
to tears to death. Indeed, a loss of Paradise may be seen as the overridingtheme
of the nine panels, connecting the Biblical and mythical stories: Adam and Eve
are compelled to leave Paradise; Orpheus' serene world is shattered by his
loss of Eurydice-he loses the transforming power of his music and ultimately his own life as punishmentfor his
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Fig. 4
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