Michael Allen Lowe
Night Owls

2011
Painting
72 x 92.75 in.    INV #: MLowe-32954
Synopsis: The setting for this work is a boudoir scene from Jean-Honore Fragonard’s drawing, Les Jets d’eau, c.1765-70, wherein nozzles have emerged from the floor spraying water, awaking sleeping nude female figures.  Lowe exaggerates the imagery in this mildly erotic drawing by replacing the nozzles  with phalluses, and adds figures from his own imagination.  The fleshed-out children in Victorian dress are referenced from Antoine Watteau’s painting Country Amusements, c.1720.  Lowe’s imagined ghostly apparitions, or owl bottomed ladies, amusingly illustrate the common colloquial term night owls.      

-There many a bird of broadest pinion built
Secure her nest, the owl, the kite, and daw
Long-tongued, frequenter of the sandy shores.
A garden-vine luxuriant on all sides
Mantled the spacious cavern, cluster-hung
Profuse; four fountains of serenest lymph
Their sinuous course pursuing side by side,
Stray’d all around, and ev’ry where appear’d. . .
.  .  . heav’n’s messenger, admiring stood
That sight, and having all survey’d, at length
Enter’d the grotto; nor the lovely nymph
Him knew not soon as seen, for not unknown
Each to the other the Immortals are,
How far soever sep’rate their abodes.

The Odyssey of Homer (Book V. p.110)
Translated by Henry Fuseli
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