Botticelli and Workshop
Further Episodes in the Tale of Nastagio degli Onesti

Previous | Home | Next

Sandro Botticelli, Futher Episodes in the Tale of Nastagio degli Onesti

Date:

1482/83

84 X 142 cm

Madrid, Museo del Prado

Nastagio was deeply moved by this story and realized how alike his situation was to that of this weekly scene. He decided to find purpose in this event and devise a plan. He wanted to shock his true love and her family by introducing them to this scene. This began the third painting.

Nastagio invited the woman he loved and her family to a formal banquet in the woods. He explained to his friends that he was over this woman and was once and for all going to tell her goodbye. Nastagio timed the luncheon just right so that their festivities would be interrupted by the devastating scene he had witnessed. He positioned the women at the table so they would be in direct vision of the hunt thus getting the most terror and shock out of the scene. When the woman and the dogs came running towards the guests and hunter caught up to her, chaos broke out and Nastagio is shown to be clam and in control of the situation.

The next part of the story was expected to be known by those looking at the painting and is not shown by Botticelli. After Anastagio kills the woman, he tells the sad story of why he was there; unrequited love was the cause for this weekly terror. The daughter of Paolo Traversari was so moved by the story that she finally decided to open her heart to Nastagio and she agreed to marry him. The wedding banquet is the last painting in Botticelli’s four part Nastagio series. Boccaccio did not actually describe what he wrote in this tale, but Botticelli painted a beautiful rendition of what may have happened.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pictures of Marines in the Pacific during World War II

Also New:

Ancient Egyptian Culture

 

 

  
 

Grad Degree in History
Click Here


 
Web Historylink101.com
Historylink101.net Historylink102.com

Want to Study Abroad?


Other Picture Galleries

   China    Egyptian  Greek  India  Mesoamerican  Rome and Italy   Turkey

Planes of World War II     Color Images of World War II    D-Day Pictures

Images of Attack on Pearl Harbor


Content Areas

New - Sandro Botticelli

  Ancient Greece  Including Greek Mythology

Ancient Rome    Egyptian Mythology

History of Farming        Art History Lessons

 

Cultures - Time Periods
Prehistory | AfricaChina | Egypt | Greece | Mesopotamian | Roman 

Aztec - Olmec | Mayan | Native American
 
Middle Ages | World War II | Home

 

Site Map     Privacy Policy     Disclaimer    Awards

About the Author

  

 

 

Copyright © 2000-2008 All Rights Reserved by Eric Rymer.

Contact Us:  Suggest a Site - General Comments

 

Page Views Since January 2004