Pastoral - Rupert Charles Wulsten Bunny
Experience Rupert Bunny’s ‘Pastoral’ (1893): A luminous oil painting of mythological figures by an Australian Symbolist. Romantic, idyllic & rich in color.
Rupert Charles Wulsten Bunny (1864-1947), an australian painter, was born in st kilda, victoria, in 1864. he received a traditional and academic education in the arts under calderon and laurens. this foundation would later serve him well in his successful career as an expatriate artist in fin-de-siècle paris. Achievements and accolades Bunny's artistic prowess was recognized early, with an honourable mention at the paris salon of 1890 for his painting tritons. he further solidified his reputation by winning a bronze medal at the paris exposition universelle in 1900 for burial of st catherine of alexandria. The french state acquired 13 of his works, including those now housed in the musée du luxembourg and regional collections.
The painting depicts a classical scene of mythological figures – likely from greek mythology – engaged in various activities near the sea. It’s an oil painting with a somewhat romantic and idealized aesthetic, reminiscent of Pre-Raphaelite style. The composition is layered, featuring foreground figures interacting directly with the viewer, middle ground showing a larger group enjoying the water and shoreline, and a distant background landscape with mountains and sky. The lighting is soft and diffused, creating an atmospheric effect rather than sharp shadows. Lines are used to define forms – particularly the musculature of the nude figures – but also to create flowing drapery and naturalistic foliage. Shapes are predominantly organic: human bodies, waves, trees, and rocks. Textures appear smooth in many areas, suggesting a glazing technique, while the foliage and ground have more visible brushstrokes. The color palette is dominated by muted earth tones with highlights of blue and red. Perspective is somewhat flattened, contributing to the painting’s dreamlike quality. Depth is suggested through atmospheric perspective – distant elements are paler and less detailed.
Bunny first sketched sea nymphs and tritons in 1887, in the French province of Brittany. In his sketchbook, among drawings of ancient menhirs, steep cliffs and sea, one image shows a nude female whose legs end in fishtails, lying back over a rock in the sea. Brittany, known as a region of myth and legend, and a resort since the 1860s for painters inspired by its exoticism and the mystery of its silver light, therefore appears to have been one source of inspiration for Bunny’s images of tritons. Another source was the swiss romantic artist arnold böcklin, whose paintings abound in centaurs, tritons, nymphs and extravagant creations of fancy.
The 1893 painting was Bunny’s second ‘pastoral’ – ‘oddly enough named’, said the Magazine of Art, ‘seeing that it is, above all, a seashore picture of ideal nymphs’. Van Gogh wrote about Bunny's work, praising his sumptuous colorist style and splendidly erudite painter of ideal themes.
The technique appears to be based on layering oil glazes for luminosity and blending, creating soft transitions between colors. Materials used are primarily oil paints on canvas.