“Not the Lover’s Choice, but the Poet’s”: Classical Receptions in Portrait of a Lady on Fire

Céline Sciamma’s film Portrait of a Lady on Fire (Portrait de la jeune fille en feu, 2019) tells its 18th-century story of love and loss in part by retelling an ancient story, the myth of the poet Orpheus and his beloved Eurydice, as related by the Roman poet Ovid in his epic Metamorphoses (c. 8 CE)...

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Main Author: Benjamin Eldon Stevens
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université Lumière Lyon 2 2020-06-01
Series:Frontière·s
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/frontieres/258
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author Benjamin Eldon Stevens
author_facet Benjamin Eldon Stevens
author_sort Benjamin Eldon Stevens
collection DOAJ
description Céline Sciamma’s film Portrait of a Lady on Fire (Portrait de la jeune fille en feu, 2019) tells its 18th-century story of love and loss in part by retelling an ancient story, the myth of the poet Orpheus and his beloved Eurydice, as related by the Roman poet Ovid in his epic Metamorphoses (c. 8 CE). The myth’s most iconic moment, when Orpheus turns around to look at Eurydice and therefore loses her to Hades, occupies a central position in the film’s plot and underlies its running theme of ‘looking at’ as ‘looking back.’ By changing certain aspects of the myth – replacing poetry or singing with painting, making both main characters women, and having them alternate between the two main mythic roles – Portrait does not so much update the ancient story as debate its meanings. What does it mean to lose someone beloved but gain their image? How is every loss a kind of death, and in its train, the life that remains a kind of afterlife? Most generally, what are the links among lived experience, memory, and art? By raising these questions via the ancient myth, Portrait meditates on the effect of making, as Orpheus did, “not the lover’s choice, but the poet’s.”
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spelling doaj-art-ba92f8f08c6045d2952b8806c35823b82025-01-09T12:57:22ZengUniversité Lumière Lyon 2Frontière·s2534-75352020-06-01210.35562/frontieres.258“Not the Lover’s Choice, but the Poet’s”: Classical Receptions in Portrait of a Lady on FireBenjamin Eldon StevensCéline Sciamma’s film Portrait of a Lady on Fire (Portrait de la jeune fille en feu, 2019) tells its 18th-century story of love and loss in part by retelling an ancient story, the myth of the poet Orpheus and his beloved Eurydice, as related by the Roman poet Ovid in his epic Metamorphoses (c. 8 CE). The myth’s most iconic moment, when Orpheus turns around to look at Eurydice and therefore loses her to Hades, occupies a central position in the film’s plot and underlies its running theme of ‘looking at’ as ‘looking back.’ By changing certain aspects of the myth – replacing poetry or singing with painting, making both main characters women, and having them alternate between the two main mythic roles – Portrait does not so much update the ancient story as debate its meanings. What does it mean to lose someone beloved but gain their image? How is every loss a kind of death, and in its train, the life that remains a kind of afterlife? Most generally, what are the links among lived experience, memory, and art? By raising these questions via the ancient myth, Portrait meditates on the effect of making, as Orpheus did, “not the lover’s choice, but the poet’s.”https://journals.openedition.org/frontieres/258
spellingShingle Benjamin Eldon Stevens
“Not the Lover’s Choice, but the Poet’s”: Classical Receptions in Portrait of a Lady on Fire
Frontière·s
title “Not the Lover’s Choice, but the Poet’s”: Classical Receptions in Portrait of a Lady on Fire
title_full “Not the Lover’s Choice, but the Poet’s”: Classical Receptions in Portrait of a Lady on Fire
title_fullStr “Not the Lover’s Choice, but the Poet’s”: Classical Receptions in Portrait of a Lady on Fire
title_full_unstemmed “Not the Lover’s Choice, but the Poet’s”: Classical Receptions in Portrait of a Lady on Fire
title_short “Not the Lover’s Choice, but the Poet’s”: Classical Receptions in Portrait of a Lady on Fire
title_sort not the lover s choice but the poet s classical receptions in portrait of a lady on fire
url https://journals.openedition.org/frontieres/258
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