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Ekloge by Hans von Marées

Ekloge

Hans von Marées·c. 1862

Historical Context

Ekloge (c. 1862), in the Wallraf-Richartz Museum, Cologne, takes its title from Virgil's Eclogues — the pastoral poems that established the literary ideal of an idyllic, sun-warmed landscape populated by shepherds and lovers free from the anxieties of city life. Hans von Marées, though less celebrated in his lifetime than Feuerbach or Böcklin, was recognized by the art theorist Konrad Fiedler and sculptor Adolf Hildebrand as the most profound figure painter of his generation. His career was marked by intense searching and dissatisfaction: he destroyed many canvases, worked in obsessive revision, and felt that he never achieved the full expression of the ideal he glimpsed. Ekloge belongs to his earlier Roman period, before the fresco cycle at the Stazione Zoologica in Naples (1873) that remains his most celebrated public achievement.

Technical Analysis

Marées builds the pastoral scene through warm, layered glazes that envelop figures and landscape in a unified atmospheric tone. His modeling of the figure avoids sharp contour, preferring instead to define form through color modulation and tonal transition — an approach influenced by Venetian painting and anticipating certain aspects of Cézanne's structural method.

Look Closer

  • ◆The figures are integrated into the landscape through shared warm tones rather than contrasted against it — Marées wanted human and natural world to feel continuous.
  • ◆The soft edges of forms — nowhere sharply delineated — create the dreamy, timeless quality of Virgilian pastoral.
  • ◆The light has the quality of late afternoon, diffuse and warm, which Marées consistently associated with Mediterranean ideality.
  • ◆The composition's balance between stillness and implied movement reflects Marées's study of ancient relief sculpture, in which figures exist in a state of poised potential.

See It In Person

Wallraf–Richartz Museum

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Quick Facts

Medium
canvas
Era
Impressionism
Genre
Genre
Location
Wallraf–Richartz Museum, undefined
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