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A large diptych painting in which the sequence of life is depicted through the aging of a woman…
La Parabola
A large diptych painting in which the sequence of life is depicted through the aging of a woman…
A large diptych painting in which the sequence of life is depicted through the aging of a woman and the degradation of her surroundings. The left panel features youthfulness and the right panel depicts maturity.
La Parabola, Cesare Laurenti, c. 1895, oil on canvas, Telfair Museum of Art, Savannah, Georgia.

La Parabola

Artist (Italian, 1854 - 1936)
Datec. 1895
MediumOil on canvas
DimensionsCanvas (Individual Panel): 87 × 113 inches (221 × 287 cm)
Canvas (Diptych): 87 × 226 inches (221 × 574 cm)
Framed: 128 × 269 × 4 inches (325.1 × 683.3 × 10.2 cm)
Credit LineMuseum purchase.
Object number1900.6.a-.b
On View
On view
CopyrightThe images and text contained on this page are owned by Telfair Museums or used by the Museum with permission from the owners. Unauthorized reproduction, transmission or display of these materials is prohibited with the exception of items deemed “fair use” as defined by U.S. and international copyright laws.Label TextBorn near Ferrara, Italy, Cesare Laurenti spent most of his life in Venice, the setting for La Parabola. German artists in Laurenti’s time referred to the painting as “Lebensbrücke” or “Bridge of Life.” Laurenti himself interpreted the painting in a letter to the Telfair’s first director, Carl Brandt: “La Parabola is the presentation of human life…The race toward pleasure, until clouds of weighty thoughts and sorrow come to disturb the serenity of the young soul…. I have determined to develop the first part of my Parabola with a lively feast in which two young men invite the gay crowd of girls to participate in songs and smiles of joy. At the door of the house…there is one of these young men who imprints a kiss on the cheeks of the girl about to cross the threshold. He represents Love. After this…the girl, already thoughtful and sad, pass[es] behind the window unfolding…the flower of her virgin youth…already touched and bound to fade. I imagined the second part at the door of a church because inside poor suffering souls seek relief…. Here, one can see the man, who, clad in priestly garments, represents Faith….” The frame seen on this work is a reproduction of the original frame, which was damaged or destroyed sometime around 1960. This reproduction of the original frame was generously funded by the Telfair Academy Guild in 2011.
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