Harvard Art Museums
Don't love me anymore?! ... Why Pamela, that would be a luxury that your methods do not permit you., p. 97
Paul Gavarni
- Date
- 1852
- Medium
- Lithograph
- Culture
- French
- Department
- Department of Prints
- Institution
- Harvard Art Museums
The authoritative record is held by Harvard Art Museums. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Harvard Art Museums and other institutions.
Sappho's Death. “Young ladies, you see where love leads us Under our feet so dainty and small The wretched chasm of an abyss Into which we eventually fall,” plate 49 from Histoire Ancienne
Art Institute of Chicago
The Pamela Hat. “You are perfectly right Madame to adopt this ravishing form of a new hat...... especially from the side it matches beautifully your physiognomy.....!,”plate 76 from Les Beaux Jours De La Vie
Art Institute of Chicago
Apelles and Campaste. Aware that Apelles was wasting away with love Alexander gave him Campeste and above the first art deal ever now was struck girlfriend against sculpture, oh what luck! (From Art and the Antique, a poetic essay by M. Cavé), plate 36(37) from Histoire Ancienne
Art Institute of Chicago

The Amorous Couple
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Love and Nature Do Not Know These Distances
Art Institute of Chicago
The Inconvenience of Having His Hair Curled. “Oh blast.... look here, watch out... you are burning me.... I am meeting someone, and I want you to make me look good....... but in order to declare my burning passion, I don't need to smell scorched!,” plate 31 from Les Beaux Jours De La Vie
Art Institute of Chicago
La luxure. / Coquetterie. / Jeune, jolie, je dois long-tems être aimée sans aimer
Musée Carnavalet, Histoire de Paris
L'Amour fuyant Psyché qui se désespère (Bartsch 52, Bartsch illustré tome 29 (volume 15, 2ème partie), page 208)
Petit Palais, musée des Beaux-arts de la Ville de Paris
L'Amour fuyant Psyché qui se désespère (Bartsch 52, Bartsch illustré tome 29 (volume 15, 2ème partie), page 208)
Petit Palais, musée des Beaux-arts de la Ville de Paris
Pastoral Cruelty
Art Institute of Chicago
La trop crédule Psyché regarde l'Amour malgré les défenses qu'il lui en avait faites et l'éveille en lui laissant tomber sur l'épaule une goutte d'huile de sa lampe (Bartsch 51, Bartsch illustré tome 29 (volume 15, 2ème partie), page 207)
Petit Palais, musée des Beaux-arts de la Ville de Paris
La trop crédule Psyché regarde l'Amour malgré les défenses qu'il lui en avait faites et l'éveille en lui laissant tomber sur l'épaule une goutte d'huile de sa lampe (Bartsch 51, Bartsch illustré tome 29 (volume 15, 2ème partie), page 207)
Petit Palais, musée des Beaux-arts de la Ville de Paris