Titian and Philostratus Rubens thought highly of
Titian and made a copy of the Venetian master's
The Worship of Venus which remained in Rubens' private collection until his death. Titian's work, in turn, was based on the
Imagines of the
sophist Philostratus of Lemnos. The
Imagines consisted of a series of descriptions of ancient paintings presumably decorating a third-century villa near Naples. In the description entitled
Cupids (
Erotes), Philostratus portrays a "swarm" of cupids in a fragrant garden gathering
apples, kissing the apples and throwing them back and forth, engaging in archery using themselves as targets since the arrows are arrows of love, wrestling, and chasing a
hare (a symbol of fertility). While the cupids are cavorting, nymphs are attending to a statue of
Venus that is garnished with a silver mirror, gilded sandals, and golden brooches. Both Titian and Rubens in his copy depict most of this activity in great detail.
Ovid The fourth book (April) of
Ovid's
Fasti also served as inspiration for Rubens'
The Feast of Venus. A portion of the poem describes a women's festival held on April 1 to honor both Venus Verticordia and
Fortuna Virilis. Per Ovid, the festival includes the washing and decoration of a statue of Venus, ritual bathing under boughs of
myrtle, and offerings of incense to Fortuna Virilis so that the goddess may hide physical blemishes from the eyes of men. The work, not always corroborated by other sources, portrays a somewhat conflicted account of the festival that blurs distinctions between class and the rite's purpose. Primarily, the cult was intended to turn a woman's heart from lust (
libidine) to chastity (
pudicitia) so that she may retain her "beauty, virtue and good repute." However, in addition to brides and mothers, Ovid includes "you who must not wear the
headbands and
long robes". This is a euphemistic reference to prostitutes (
meretrices) who were not allowed to wear the hairstyle and clothes of a respectable matron. Instead, they wore a short tunic and
toga. Prostitutes were not being asked to embrace chastity, so their participation must have served other purposes. ==Composition==