![]() ![]() ![]() In this article, we'll discuss five little known facts about the Fiddle Leaf Fig Tree. Thus, this potted plant has waltzed its way into the spotlight and seems to be enjoying the highly justifiable limelight. It would seem that the Fidddle Figs are evidence of a refined aesthetic and excellent taste, on the part of their owners. This glamourous indoor plant can often be found nestled between the glossy pages of home and design magazines, all over Pinterest, Blogs, Instagram and taking prime position in many a lounge, bedroom or home office spaces all over the world. The Ficus Lyrata, has been named an ‘it’ plant as long ago as 2012, and is still as popular as ever! Design bloggers, Instagrammers and indoor plant lovers alike are ‘all over’ this beautifully stylish plant. The Fiddle Leaf Fig was named after the musical instrument, the fiddle, owing to the broad, large fiddle-shaped leaves that this plant produces. Owning one is a testament to your excellent style sensibilities and keeping up with the times. Many of these alterations have since been reversed, damaging some of the statues.Is it possible not to fall in love with the Fiddle Leaf Fig ? With its lush, bold, and oh-so-green foliage. The Adam and Eve panels on the Ghent Altarpiece, already equipped with fig leaves by Jan van Eyck, were simply replaced with 19th-century panels copying the figures but clothed. "The fig leaves of decent reticence" which Charles Kingsley described were applied not only to statuary but to literature as well. The age of the rising middle class in Victorian England was, or course, the age of the fig leaf. For free-standing statues this did not work well, and carved or cast fig leaves were sometimes added, such as with the plaster copy of Michelangelo's David displayed in Victorian era London. This has been dubbed the "fig leaf campaign". Often, as in the famous case of Michelangelo's The Last Judgement, drapery or extra branches from any nearby bush was used. ![]() This was especially a feature of Northern Renaissance art.įrom about 1530, the developing reaction to Renaissance freedoms and excesses that led to the Council of Trent also led to a number of artworks, especially in churches or public places, being altered to reduce the amount of nudity on display. Adam and Eve were often shown wearing fig or other leaves, following the Biblical description. During the Middle Ages, only the unfortunate (most often the damned) were usually shown naked, although the depictions were then often rather explicit. This tradition continued in Ancient Roman art until the conversion of the Roman Empire to Christianity, when heroic nudity vanished. In Ancient Greek art, male nakedness, including the genitals, was common, although the female vulval area was generally covered in art for public display. Some paintings and statues have the genitals of their subjects covered by a representation of an actual fig leaf or similar object, either as part of the work or added afterward for perceived modesty. The expression " fig leaf" is widely used figuratively to convey the covering up of an act or an object that is embarrassing or distasteful with something of innocuous appearance, a metaphorical reference to the Biblical Book of Genesis in which Adam and Eve used fig leaves to cover their nudity after eating the forbidden fruit from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. The fig leaf was placed there under the more " chaste" Popes later, most such coverings were removed. A statue of Mercury holding the caduceus in the Vatican, with a fig leaf placed over the genitalia. ![]()
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