Charles William Wyllie
“Mythological Scene”.
Oil on canvas.
Shows signs of deterioration on the painted surface.
Signed in the lower right corner.
Measurements: 73 x 60 cm.
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DESCRIPTION
CHARLES WILLIAM WYLLIE (London, 1853 – 1923).
“Mythological Scene.”
Oil on canvas.
Shows signs of deterioration on the painted surface.
Signed in the lower right corner.
Measurements: 73 x 60 cm.
Charles William Wyllie was a British painter trained at the Leigh School of Art and the prestigious Royal Academy Schools. The younger brother of the renowned marine painter William Lionel Wyllie, he shared his brother’s interest in coastal settings, though he developed his own artistic style, moving away from strictly topographical depictions of the British coastline to explore a poetic universe populated by female figures, sea nymphs, and allegories inspired by classical mythology. His work is characterized by the creation of idealized scenes in which nature, the sea, and the human figure merge into compositions of marked lyricism, closely aligned with the Symbolist movements that flourished in Europe in the late 19th century.
This painting is an excellent example of this more evocative facet of his work. In it, two nude figures appear immersed in a diffuse, enveloping atmosphere: a young woman partially covered by a rich reddish cloak shares the space with a male figure crowned with leaves, often iconographically identified as a Bacchic or faun-like figure. The scene is complemented by a lavish still life of flowers and fruits, elements that enrich the composition’s symbolic content and reinforce its allegorical character.
The loose, airy brushwork, together with the delicate modeling of the figures, lends the work a dreamlike quality that transcends mere narrative representation. The warm tones, soft color transitions, and suspended atmosphere directly evoke the Symbolist sensibility—a movement that sought to express ideas, emotions, and spiritual states through images laden with suggestions and hidden meanings. Rather than illustrating a specific episode, the painting evokes universal concepts linked to beauty, sensuality, nature, and the transience of life.
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