reply to post by The Endtime Warrior
Personifying abstract qualities is a common human game, Endtime Warrior.
The ancient gods were simply personifications of human traits and activities: fatherhood, motherhood, art and thought, virginity, lust, hunting, war,
wisdom, ecstasy, fertility and so on. And, of course, death. 'He' was known as Hades to the Greeks, Pluto to the Romans.
Artists and poets have always been notorious for personifying abstractions. Homer, in the
Iliad, even personifies the hours of the day.
Greek sculptors depicted Victory as a winged goddess. Soviet sculptors personified things like 'Correct Marxist-Leninist Thought Spurring the Workers
of the Republic to Greater Productivity.'
Damien Hirst 'personified'
the physical
impossibility of death in the mind of someone living as a stuffed shark in a tank of formaldehyde.
The personification of Death was especially widespread in plague-stricken mediaeval Europe, when people were dropping like flies and nobody knew who
would be next.
From that time and place comes the intriguiing conceit of
Death and the Maiden. It has
inspired thousands of works of art: see
here--and remains popular to this day. Schubert wrote a string quartet based on it;
Donald Friend, a hugely underrated
Australian painter of the 1960s, often returned to the theme. More recently, the Argentinian playwright Ariel Dorfman used the title for
a play about political oppression, truth and reconciliation.
It hardly needs saying that death is not a person or supernatural being that is jealous of life--obviously this is not possible, because something has
to be alive before it can feel jealousy, so there is nothing to be jealous of. Death is an act, usually though not always involuntary, that our bodies
perform.
In a metaphorical sense, though, it's possible to imagine Death as a person. Here's a page of
images of Death in art. Enjoy.
Not all the images are child-friendly,
by the way.
edit on 7/10/10 by Astyanax because: links to nekkid bodies