This fascinating book charts the many ways artists have represented the passionate bonds that shape human life—from sacred devotion to erotic desire.
Transporting readers across centuries and cultures, this volume pairs fifty artworks with brief, incisive essays that consider how love has been pictured, interpreted, and expressed in different media.
Each entry examines a single work—ranging from early religious icons and Renaissance portraits to ornate Rococo scenes, modernist experimentations, and contemporary provocations—and reflects on the atmosphere, symbolism, and cultural setting of each artwork. Moving through many registers of affection—fidelity, enchantment, longing, sensual pleasure, heartbreak, and transcendence—the selections unfold as a sequence of intimate encounters.
Readers are invited to consider a garden scene by Renoir, a Rococo tableau from Fragonard’s Progress of Love series, Bronzino’s charged allegory of Venus and Cupid, and Jan van Eyck’s Arnolfini Portrait, alongside masterpieces by Rodin, Klimt, Picasso, Chagall, Kahlo, and Abramović—as well as many other artists whose works deepen and complicate the book’s exploration of humanity’s most powerful emotion.
Impeccably produced and extensively illustrated, this exquisite volume offers a layered study of love’s complexity, revealing how artists working in many forms have given shape to an emotion that is universal, elusive, and continually reinterpreted.