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    • Image courtesy of flickr.com

      flickr.com

      • Skulls became popular symbols of Memento Mori art because they were a convenient reminder that life and the mortal world are fleeting. While those living are identifiable through facial features, skulls and skeletons are not and they can therefore represent and relate to any viewer.
      artfilemagazine.com/memento-mori-art/
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Memento_moriMemento mori - Wikipedia

    Memento mori (Latin for "remember (that you have) to die") is an artistic or symbolic trope acting as a reminder of the inevitability of death. The concept has its roots in the philosophers of classical antiquity and Christianity , and appeared in funerary art and architecture from the medieval period onwards.

  3. Jun 23, 2019 · Skulls, skeletons, and skulls with wings have all been employed as powerful reminders that we will all leave this earth at some point. Skulls are, in fact, the most commonplace symbol in memento mori art and are the classic symbol of mortality.

  4. www.tate.org.uk › art › art-termsMemento mori | Tate

    Memento mori is a Latin phrase meaning ‘remember you must die’. A basic memento mori painting would be a portrait with a skull but other symbols commonly found are hour glasses or clocks, extinguished or guttering candles, fruit, and flowers.

  5. In funerary art, memento mori is depicted by a winged skull, a skull and crossbones, or a full skeleton carved on gravestones and tombs. In painting, symbols of mortality include hourglasses, wilted flowers, dead animals, candles, and soap bubbles along with skulls and bones.

  6. Oct 1, 2021 · When looked at from a different angle at the bottom-right corner of the painting, this shape is revealed to be a skull — a visualization of the saying “memento mori.”

  7. Oct 28, 2019 · One famous memento mori appears on an exterior panel of Jan Gossaert’s Carondelet Diptych (1517) at the Louvre. The artist painted a skull with a dislocated jawan allusion to the dissolution of the personality after death.

  8. The skull is a memento mori, a reminder of the inevitable approach of death. Picasso was superstitious about death, kept a skull in his studio and had included human or animal skulls in his work as early as 1908 [ Composition with Skull ]".

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