Memento Mori, “To This Favour”, William Michael Harnett , 1879, Cleveland Museum
Memento Mori, “To This Favour”, William Michael Harnett , 1879, Cleveland Museum of Art: American Painting and SculptureThe Latin term memento mori describes a traditional subject in art that addresses mortality. In Harnett’s example, the extinguished candle, spent hourglass, and skull symbolize death. A quote from William Shakespeare’s Hamlet, inscribed on the inside cover of a tattered book, reinforces the theme. It comes from the play’s famed graveyard scene where Hamlet discovers a skull and grimly ponders his beloved Ophelia, ironically unaware that she is already dead. The “paint” in the quote not only refers to Ophelia’s makeup, but also wittily evokes the artifice of Harnett’s picture.Size: Framed: 77.9 x 98.4 x 8.6 cm (30 11/16 x 38 ¾ x 3 3/8 in.); Unframed: 61.3 x 81.5 cm (24 1/8 x 32 1/16 in.)Medium: oil on canvashttps://clevelandart.org/art/1965.235 -- source link
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