A new hidden layer found on an old paintingA Brazilian art Brazilian visual art began in the 18th century with painting with a strong European accent. Only in the 19th century was an original Brazilian art style introduced by Belmiro de Almeida Jr. restorer has discovered a new layer hidden in a centuries-old painting of the Greek God of fertility Priapus Priapus (prīā`pəs), in Greek religion, fertility god of gardens and herds; son of Aphrodite and Dionysus. He was represented as a grotesque little man with an enormous phallus. Priapus was important in fertility rites. , by French artist Nicolas Poussin -- the deity's erect penis. "They hid the phallus phallus /phal·lus/ (fal´us) pl. phal´li 1. penis. 2. a representation of the penis. 3. the primordium of the penis or clitoris that develops from the genital tubercle. of Priapus. It's what we call adjustment for modesty, and it's not uncommon," said Regina Pinto Moreira, quoted in Tuesday's edition of the Folha de Sao Paulo newspaper. She suspects the cover-up was made in conservative Catholic Spain in the 18th century. Moreira, who worked as a master art restorer at the Louvre Louvre (l `vrə), foremost French museum of art, located in Paris. The building was a royal fortress and palace built by Philip II in the late 12th cent. in Paris for some 30 years, spent eight months alongside two French experts restoring Poussin's large 1634-1638 painting "Hymenaios Disguised as a Woman During an Offering to Priapus."
The 3.71-meter (12.2-feet) by 1.66-meter (5.44-feet) painting depicts Hymenaios, the Greek god of marriage ceremonies, dressed as a woman and dancing with Priapus, who was traditionally depicted with an erect penis. The painting however once belonged to the Spanish royal family The Royal Family of the Kingdom of Spain consists of the direct descendants of the current king, Juan Carlos. The Spanish royal family belongs to the House of Bourbon. The King's two daughters hold the title Infanta (Princess) of Spain, with the style , and Moreira said she thinks this was when the post-production modesty came in. Removing layers of dirt, dust and paint specks that accumulated over more than three centuries cost 150,000 euros (213,000 dollars). The artwork will be put on display at Sao Paulo's grand Museo de Art (MASP MASP Mannan-Binding Lectin Serine Protease MASP Mid Atlantic Star Party (astronomical event) MASP Military Academic Skills Program MASP Michigan Association of School Psychologists MASP Multiangle Aerosol Spectrometer Probe ) on September 8. Following the Napoleonic wars, the painting moved from Spain to the hands of English aristocrats, then was sold to French art dealer Georges Wildenstein. He sold it in 1953 to influential Brazilian journalist and MASP founder Francisco Assis Chateaubriand.
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