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Two young women sit close together on a stone ledge before a broad view of Mount Vesuvius in Italy. The woman at right faces us directly, upright and calm, her pale skin softly lit and her dark hair crowned with green vine leaves. She wears a voluminous white blouse, a deep blue apron, gold jewelry, and large dangling earrings. Her companion’s arm curves around her shoulders in a protective, intimate gesture. The second woman leans her head against the other’s chest and shoulder, tilting her face toward us with a quieter, more wistful expression. She wears a red dress with a white chemise and patterned bodice, layered necklaces, and a blue-and-red headscarf. At left, her hand holds a large tambourine decorated with red roundels and small jingles. Behind them, the volcano rises under a pale sky, its plume drifting outward, while a small building and dark cypress trees anchor the distant landscape.

French artist Guillaume Bodinier gives the scene both tenderness and theatricality. The closeness of the women reads first as companionship, even affection as one figure shelters, the other yields, and their linked bodies create a quiet emotional center. At the same time, the costume, tambourine, vine crown, and southern setting turn them into an imagined vision of Italy shaped for a French audience hungry for travel, beauty, and regional “types.”

The alternate title, Les filles de Procida, suggests a more specific local identity tied to the island near Naples, though the sitters themselves are not named. Vesuvius is essential to the painting’s mood. It is picturesque, but its drifting smoke also introduces unease, placing youthful beauty beside a reminder of instability and change. Painted in 1835, after Bodinier’s Italian studies and travels, the work balances academic finish with Romantic feeling via polished surfaces, idealized faces, and a carefully staged intimacy that invites us to see these women as a pair bound by closeness, poise, and shared presence.

Two young women sit close together on a stone ledge before a broad view of Mount Vesuvius in Italy. The woman at right faces us directly, upright and calm, her pale skin softly lit and her dark hair crowned with green vine leaves. She wears a voluminous white blouse, a deep blue apron, gold jewelry, and large dangling earrings. Her companion’s arm curves around her shoulders in a protective, intimate gesture. The second woman leans her head against the other’s chest and shoulder, tilting her face toward us with a quieter, more wistful expression. She wears a red dress with a white chemise and patterned bodice, layered necklaces, and a blue-and-red headscarf. At left, her hand holds a large tambourine decorated with red roundels and small jingles. Behind them, the volcano rises under a pale sky, its plume drifting outward, while a small building and dark cypress trees anchor the distant landscape. French artist Guillaume Bodinier gives the scene both tenderness and theatricality. The closeness of the women reads first as companionship, even affection as one figure shelters, the other yields, and their linked bodies create a quiet emotional center. At the same time, the costume, tambourine, vine crown, and southern setting turn them into an imagined vision of Italy shaped for a French audience hungry for travel, beauty, and regional “types.” The alternate title, Les filles de Procida, suggests a more specific local identity tied to the island near Naples, though the sitters themselves are not named. Vesuvius is essential to the painting’s mood. It is picturesque, but its drifting smoke also introduces unease, placing youthful beauty beside a reminder of instability and change. Painted in 1835, after Bodinier’s Italian studies and travels, the work balances academic finish with Romantic feeling via polished surfaces, idealized faces, and a carefully staged intimacy that invites us to see these women as a pair bound by closeness, poise, and shared presence.

“Jeunes napolitaines (Young Neapolitan Women)” by Guillaume Bodinier (French) - Oil on canvas / 1835 - Villa Vauban (Luxembourg) #WomenInArt #GuillaumeBodinier #Bodinier #VillaVauban #art #arte #arttext #FrenchArt #FrenchArtist #BlueskyArt #Romanticism #MuseeVillaVauban #PortraitOfWomen #1830sArt

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