“A Summer Morning” by Rupert Bunny is a romantic portrayal of two women at leisure. He depicts the charmed and idyllic life of France’s comfortable existence preceding the First World War.
In this painting, Bunny has included a rose, a traditional symbol of love, as well as the white swans, which are symbolic of grace and beauty.
This dream-like painting imagines an ideal view of life and art. The picture incorporates aspects of symbolism and allegorical subjects, which smoothly flow between representations of antiquity and a familiar modern landscape.
Rupert Bunny
Rupert Bunny (1864 – 1947) was an Australian painter, who was a magnificent colorist and erudite painter. He painted classic themes and could masterfully handle large-scale composition.
His paintings were inspired by European masters and brought him success more significant than any other Australian artist working abroad.
Bunny initially studied art in London, then he went to Paris to study and was a frequent visitor to the Étaples Art colony.
The Etaples Art Colony consisted of artists working in the Étaples area of northern France at the turn of the 20th century.
Although broadly international, it was made up mainly of English-speakers from North America, Australasia, and the British Isles.
Bunny achieved success and critical acclaim as an expatriate in Paris in the 1800’s. He gained an honorable mention at the Paris Salon of 1890 and a bronze medal at the Paris Exposition Universelle in 1900.
The French state acquired 13 of his works for the Musée du Luxembourg and regional collections. Rupert Bunny’s success during the decades he spent in Paris saw his work exhibited throughout Europe and collected by many museums.
He also led a cosmopolitan life with acquaintances among the leading celebrates of the time, such as Nellie Melba, Auguste Rodin, and Sarah Bernhardt.
In 1902, he married Jeanne Heloise Morel, a former art student, and model, who often appeared in his paintings.
After traveling back and forth between Australia and France on many occasions, after his wife died in 1933, he returned permanently to Australia.
A Summer Morning
- Title: A Summer Morning
- Artist: Rupert Charles Wulsten Bunny
- Dates: 1897
- Style: Impressionism
- Materials: Oil on Canvas
- Dimensions: Height: 97.9 mm (3.85 in). Width: 129.5 mm (5.1 in).
- Museum: Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide
Rupert Bunny
- Name: Rupert Charles Wulsten Bunny
- Born: 1864 – Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
- Died: 25 May 1947 (aged 82) – Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
- Bio: Rupert Bunny
- Notable Works:
- Pastorale
- A Summer Morning
- Endormies
- Summer Time
- La Fontaine
Rupert Bunny
A Tour of the Art Gallery of South Australia
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- “A break away!” by Tom Roberts
- “A holiday at Mentone” by Charles Conder
- “Dandenongs from Heidelberg” by Charles Conder
- “A Summer Morning” by Rupert Bunny
- “Circe Invidiosa” by John William Waterhouse
- “The Favorites of the Emperor Honorius” by John William Waterhouse
- Melencolia I by Albrecht Dürer
Australian artist with a French connection
Rupert Bunny
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“Art is an illusion of spontaneity.”
– Japanese Proverb
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Photo Credit: Rupert Bunny [Public domain or Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
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