Cushion cover - Ligie the Mermaid (dropship item)
- Free shipping on orders over €100. Dropshipping items not included.
- In stock, ready to ship
- Backordered, shipping soon
- Voglio Bene. Made in France
- size: 50x50 cm, weight 230g
- material: velvet
- Note: inner cushion must be purchased separately Inner cushion Fabric, polyester fiber filling. Made in Spain.
A gorgeous, high-quality cushion cover from Voglio Bene with the 'Ligie the Mermaid' print. Different prints on the front and back.
Symbolism
The legacy of Venus: The pose of the depicted mermaid is based on the ancient Venus pudica iconography, in which one hand covers the breast and the other the lower body. This gesture has been known since the Hellenistic period and was transmitted to the Renaissance particularly through sculptures and paintings of Venus. It does not signify shame in the modern sense, but rather a controlled withdrawal into oneself. The gesture refers to the power of beauty, vitality, and fertility that is not openly given but protected and held inwardly. Venus’s mythological allure is a life-generating, world-moving force that manifests as natural attraction and balance. This idea remains present in the figure, even though the classical goddess has been transformed into another form.
The mermaid is an ancient mythological figure, known already in classical sources and medieval bestiaries. Unlike later fairy-tale interpretations, early mermaid symbolism is ambivalent. It combines seduction, danger, and transgression. The mermaid exists between two worlds: the depths of the sea and a liminal zone that touches human reality. Symbolically, it represents the unconscious, instinctive wisdom, and an attraction that can draw one into profound depths but may also lead astray if approached without awareness.
Combined meaning: In ancient mythology, Venus’s allure is a life-giving force that sets order in motion, whereas the mermaid’s attraction belongs to a threshold realm, where the call leads toward unconscious depths and may also result in disorientation. The union of Venus and the mermaid brings together the archetype of love and desire with a deep, non-verbal layer of the psyche. Beauty here is not merely harmonious or oriented toward light, but also deep, enigmatic, and oceanic. The figure carries both attraction and warning, reminding us that true allure arises from a connection to one’s own depths and the capacity to remain conscious within them.
Symbolism is always multi-layered in nature and opens up in multiple interpretations, which everyone can approach from their own starting points, thus enriching the understanding of the different dimensions of the symbol.