| Support Type: | Canvas |
| Paint Type: | Oil Paint |
| Current Location: | Galleria d\'Arte Moderna, Milano |
Love at the Source of Life by Giovanni Segantini is a richly symbolic work that the painter himself described in a letter to the writer and playwright Domenico Tumiati, dated October 11, 1896. In his own words, the painting "represents the playful and carefree love of the female and the thoughtful love of the male, bound together by the natural impulse of youth and spring." The central embrace of the two figures carries a layered meaning. As critic Annie-Paule Quinsac observes, it is strained and cold — less a tender moment than a rite of spring — where it is ultimately the flowers, the grass, and the sky that suggest the triumph of life and its eternal return. The white robes worn by the figures allude to the lily, a flower that in iconography represents purity par excellence. The natural setting is equally deliberate. The red rhododendrons surrounding the couple symbolize eternal love, while the Swiss pine — known locally as the "zembri" — represents eternal hope, both themes central to Segantini's philosophical meditations. On a broader level, as critic Michael Gibson notes, the work is symbolic in many ways: for the pantheism suggested by the mountain, and for the winged figure waiting at a spring, evoking the source of life itself.
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