The subject of Sadko is from a bylina—an oral epic poem—recorded in north-western Russia. The merchant and musician Sadko has been brought to the realm of the Sea Tsarto give a performance. After the Sea Tsar has danced to his music—causing a devastating storm in the process—Sadko is asked to choose one of the tsar’s mermaid daughters to take as his wife. Following the advice of a saint, Sadko refuses three times three hundred daughters before accepting the last one, Chernavushka. Repin painted Sadko to the right, overlooking a procession of half-human, half-aquatic women who pass by; the rejected mermaids at the front look disappointed. Chernavushka appears behind everybody else and glances toward the man. The image composition is made with a worm’s-eye view and a high horizon.

  • jlow (he/him)@beehaw.org
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    4 months ago

    Interesting that the first mermaid is a clichee (naked chest and lower body is a fish) while all others look mostly like regular land-people …

    • craftyindividual@lemm.eeOPM
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      4 months ago

      The most confusing kind is top half fish, bottom half woman. Or the one on the Starbucks logo holding a weird posed.