"The Slave Girl's Song"
This painting is an example of the work of Henry Ippolitovich Semiradsky in the 1880s, when the artist's language became an "unheroic", life-descriptive interpretation of ancient life, starting with "Dance among Swords" in 1881 (in the State Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow), and up to the apogee of this theme in the large canvas "Phryne at the Poseidon Festival in Eleusis" in 1889 (The State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg).
The artist's creative techniques are characteristic: the motif of a serenely beautiful spectacle, the compositional balance of landscape and figures, and major plein-airism. The uniqueness of the latter was noted by the Polish writer Henryk Sienkiewicz, who was very close to this painter in spirit: "No one conveys the element of sunlight like Semiradsky. <...> Only those who have looked at the surroundings of Rome with their own eyes <...> will be able to understand how much truth and soul there is in this landscape, <...> in this harmony of pink and blue flowers, in this transparent distance,"— quoted by the publication: Henry Semiradsky. Album. Compiled by D. N. Lebedeva, Moscow, 1997.
The composition "Songs of a Slave" combines the traditionally academic alternation of three plans with the variable variety of techniques characteristic of "salon" painting of the second half of the 19th century. If the group of figures in the foreground is distinguished by its "jewelery" completeness, the precision of exquisitely drawn details, then the silhouettes of architecture in the background are already slightly blurred, and the distant landscape generally tends to the pure decorative color spots. But with the removal of the viewer's gaze into the depths of the picturesque space, the intensity of colors increases: bright light floods the scene from the depths of the canvas, while shadow and peace reign in the foreground.
The singing slave is obviously from the East: Egyptian, Syrian, or Jewish. She accompanies herself on a Middle Eastern framed harp of the type that was known back to the Sumero-Akkadian civilization of the third millennium BC. In the background, we see a purely Mediterranean kithara, designed for the previous (or maybe upcoming) concert number.
Garden swings were very popular among the Romans: They were usually found in every more or less well-to-do household as a symbol of family well-being. Swinging the bride by her groom was part of the marriage ritual. Mature men, relaxing on the swing, philosophized.