[Skip to content] [Skip to main navigation] [Skip to quick links] [Go to accessibility information]

Art UK
Menu
SIGN IN
Search
Shop
  • About
  • Discover
  • Learn
  • Stories
  • Donate Donate

Main menu

Close
  • Home
  • Search form

    • Discover

      • Artworks
      • Artists
      • Topics
      • People
      • Art terms
      • Stories
      • Curations
    • Learn

      • Learning resources
      • The Superpower of Looking
      • Visual literacy
      • Write on Art
    • Participate

      • Tagger
      • Curate
      • Art Detective
    • Visit

      • Venues
      • What's on
    • Support us

      • Become a Patron
      • Our funders
    • About

      • What we do
      • Our impact
      • Who we are
      • Who funds us
    • For collections

      • Partner collections
      • Digital skills for collections
    • Shop

      • Prints
      • Art themes
      • Books
      • Gifts
      • About the shop
  • Sign in
  • Register

Remember me (uncheck on a public computer)

By signing up you agree to terms and conditions and privacy policy

Forgotten password?

Enter your email address below and we’ll send you a link to reset your password


Cancel

I agree to the Art UK terms and conditions and privacy policy

Sign up to the Art UK newsletter, a weekly edit of insightful art stories


Finding Art UK useful? Support us to keep it free.

Donate Finding Art UK useful? Support us to keep it free.

Topics

Love and desire

  • Summary
Echo and Narcissus
Image credit: Walker Art Gallery

Echo and Narcissus

John William Waterhouse (1849–1917)

Walker Art Gallery

From Adam and Eve to Tracey Emin, love and desire are a foundation of both life and art. Many Greek and Roman myths, historically the source of many paintings, are about love and desire, jealousy and lust. For example, Zeus, the king of the Greek gods, took many forms to seduce goddesses and mortals – as a swan, a bull and a shower of gold. Cupid, the Roman god of love, is found everywhere.

Read more

Western religions tried to contain erotic love within marriage – see Jan van Eyck's Arnolfini portrait – but art and literature treat the subject more openly. Seventeenth-century Dutch treatments of illicit domestic romance were followed by more decorous nineteenth-century versions: Haynes King's Jealousy and Flirtation is a typical example.

How artists respond to love

Art, it turns out, is filled with love and heartbreak. The artistic process itself, most readily available to the artist, is often the means by which they deal with romantic turmoil. But why do they do it? Why expose oneself so fully to potential trauma?

This film is part of the series The Art of Discomfort which looks at how artists explore or present challenging themes in their work.

Video credit: National Galleries of Scotland and HeeHaw

Artworks

  • Gillie
    Gillie Dick Lee (1923–2001)
    Southampton City Art Gallery
  • Robert Lovelace Preparing to Abduct Clarissa Harlowe
    Robert Lovelace Preparing to Abduct Clarissa Harlowe Francis Hayman (1708–1776)
    Southampton City Art Gallery
  • Wedding
    Wedding Eric Meadus (1931–1970)
    Southampton City Art Gallery
  • Couple
    Couple Lizzie Jones (b.1972)
    Southampton City Art Gallery
  • Lovers by the Sea with a Hawk
    Lovers by the Sea with a Hawk Patrick Hayman (1915–1988)
    Southampton City Art Gallery
  • Idyll
    Idyll Laurence Koe (1869–1913)
    Brighton & Hove Museums
  • Portrait of Giovanni(?) Arnolfini and his Wife
    Portrait of Giovanni(?) Arnolfini and his Wife Jan van Eyck (c.1390–1441)
    The National Gallery, London
  • 336 more

Stories

  • Lovesick blues: a short history of love and pain in art

    Lydia Figes

  • A gift guide for Valentine's Day: what (not) to get your partner

    Molly Tresadern

  • Star-crossed lovers: Romeo and Juliet in art

    Lucy Ellis

  • All dressed up with nowhere to go: love and angst in the work of Watteau

    Adam Wattam

  • Objects of affection for Saint Dwynwen's Day

    Jenny Mathiasson

  • Art lovers: do you know these British artist couples?

    Imelda Barnard

  • Stanley Spencer and Daphne Charlton: an artistic affair

    Carolyn Leder

  • Art Matters podcast: the art of love

    Ferren Gipson

  • Nude women bathing: Susanna, Bathsheba and the troubling male gaze

    Jonathan Hajdamach

  • Meghan, Harry and weddings in art

    Bee Tajudeen

  • Bohemians revisited: deconstructing the myth of the muse

    Alicia Foster

  • Zeus and Ganymede
    Divine homosexuality: Ganymede and Antinous as queer icons in art

    Ben Gazur

  • From poverty to painter's muse: the remarkable life of Emma Hamilton

    Kate Williams

  • Art Matters podcast: let's talk about erotic art

    Ferren Gipson

Learning resources

  • COL_GAG_EC3V_SITC_SYMB-001.jpg
    Round-up
    LGBTQ+ resources
    • KS2 (ENG)
      KS2 (NI)
      CfE L2 (SCO)
      PS3 (WAL)
      KS3 (ENG)
      KS3 (NI)
      CfE L3 (SCO)
      KS3 (WAL)
      KS4 (ENG)
      KS4 (NI)
      CfE L4 (SCO)
      KS4 (WAL)
  • STF_STKMG_FA_1936_FA_216-001.jpg
    Audio
    Audio description of 'Eternal Spring' by Auguste Rodin
    • KS5 (ENG)
      KS5 (NI)
      CfE Sen. (SCO)
      KS5 (WAL)
      KS4 (ENG)
      KS4 (NI)
      CfE L4 (SCO)
      KS4 (WAL)

Do you know someone who would love this resource?
Tell them about it...

https://batch.artuk.org/discover/topics/love-and-desire Copy
Link copied to clipboard!
  • bloomberg
  • dlb foundation
  • Supported by

    Arts CouncilArts Council
  • heritage fund
® is a registered trade mark of the Public Catalogue Foundation.
Art UK is the operating name of the Public Catalogue Foundation, a charity registered in England and Wales (1096185) and Scotland (SC048601).

Follow us

    • Join us on Facebook
    • Follow us on YouTube
    • Top
  • Subscribe to newsletter
  • Donate to Art UK

Quick links

  • Contact us
  • FAQ
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy policy
  • AI policy
  • Use of cookies
  • Copyright notice
  • Accessibility
  • Shop
  • Disclaimer
  • Jobs
  • Website credits
® is a registered trade mark of the Public Catalogue Foundation.
Art UK is the operating name of the Public Catalogue Foundation, a charity registered in England and Wales (1096185) and Scotland (SC048601).