The painting depicts a part of a sculptural relief whose composition shows three women moving from the right side. The work is probably derived from the Greek original from the fourth century BC. The name Gradiva, Latin for "walking", is attributed to this first girl of the group of women in relief. Sigmund Freud, who collected ancient art, bought a cast of this relief into his office. She became a well-known mythological figure in the twentieth century thanks to the novel Gradiva: A Pompeian Fantasy (1903) by the German writer Wilhelm Jensen.
Let the work speak for itself, you can go to the Chiaramonti Museum in Rome (Vatican) to see it or get a painting for your room or office.
I offer production of 70 x 140 cm painting, cotton canvas on blind frame, in several colours. The image can also be mirrored if it is more suitable for your premises. The image was created by merging several photographs and subsequent editing and retouching, as the master is damaged in places.