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Et in Arcadia ego, Latin for "Even in Arcadia, there am I", may refer to: Et in Arcadia ego (Poussin), also called The Arcadian Shepherds, a 1637–38 ...
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Et in Arcadia ego is a 1637–38 painting by French Baroque painter Nicolas Poussin. It depicts a pastoral scene with idealized shepherds from classical ...

Et in Arcadia ego

Painting by Nicolas Poussin
Et in Arcadia ego is a 1637–38 painting by French Baroque painter Nicolas Poussin. It depicts a pastoral scene with idealized shepherds from classical antiquity, and a woman, possibly a shepherdess, ... Wikipedia
Periods: Baroque and Classicism
Location: Louvre Museum
Created: 1637–1638
Medium: Oil paint
Genre: History painting
Dimensions: 85 cm × 121 cm (34.25 in × 47.24 in)

Mar 20, 2020 · The line is traditionally understood as “Even in Arcadia [an ideal pastoral idyll], I [Death] am still present.”
We're in the Louvre, and we're looking at a Nicholas Poussin, “Et in Arcadia Ego.” We have four figures. We see ancient shepherds and a very classical female ...
Oct 5, 2022 · “Et in Arcadia Ego,” the name of the painting, meant that the monument was from the Arcadia region of the Peloponnese. The extra sarcophagus ...
'Et in Arcadia ego' is a phrase coined by Virgil and used in 17th century Italy expressing, in an elliptical way, the humanistic sentiment: Even in Arcadia I ( ...
'Et in Arcadia Ego' is based on the term coined by Pope Clement IX in the 17th century, who found inspiration from Virgil's 'Arcadian' Eclogues.
May 5, 2021 · Et in Arcadia Ego is the voice of the entombed speaking: 'Even in Arcadia, there I am'. The 17th-century French neoclassicist Nicolas Poussin made the phrase ...
The project aims to examine mortality and create a dialogue with and about cancer. The title references a painting by Poussin from 1637-38.
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