Love Seduces Innocence, Pleasure Entraps, and Remorse Follows
| Support Type: | Canvas |
| Paint Type: | Oil Paint |
| Current Location: | National Gallery of Canada |
| Location History: | Commissioned by Empress Josephine, this canvas was to be shown at the 1810 Salon, but the plan was abandoned when Napoleon divorced her in late 1809. ’Unfinished, the canvas remained in the artist’s studio until his death.’. |
Pierre-Paul Prud'hon's paintings often explore themes of love, innocence, desire, virtue, and remorse. The painting portrays a procession of four figures in a woodland forest. At the center of the composition, is a winged young man with a quiver slung over his back who represents Cupid, God of Love. The beautiful woman with modest clothing represents Innocence who is in the arms of Love, lost in Love's seduction. The childlike figure, pulling on Innocence's dress is Putto, who represents Pleasure. Trailing behind Cupid is Remorse whose hand is held up to his bowed head, his slumped shoulders indicates anguish. Viewers see allegories as some artificial, empty games however Purd'hon desired to invigorate the allegory by describing a philosophical allegory about the human experience of desire. Therefore, the painting is not dependent on abstract symbols, rather the figures embody and express their primary natures. Love is presented as alluring and tempting force, while Innocence is presented as a naive, young lady. Pleasure is childlike because, like a child, pleasure is be thoughtless and living in the moment. The order in which the figures are displayed are of utmost importance. The characters follow each other and they are intimately and inevitably linked together. It traces the fall of unrestrained desire, where love becomes temptation, temptation becomes a trap, and guilt inevitably follows. Purd'hon's allegorical vision perfectly captures the fleeting nature of pleasure and the emotional cost of innocence lost to temptation, creating a deeply human mediation on desire, vulnerability, and regret.
