And given Caravaggio was renowned for his technique of painting in shadows, fittingly the rooms are dark with areas of intense illumination. It's very dramatic, manageable, informative, not too pretentious.
It was actually very nice just to have the one painting to look at. Normally I wander through hundreds and don't maybe absorb that much, or think too deeply about the painting before me as there are so many others just waiting next to it.
This painting is extraordinary for a number of reasons. First the realism. Second the symbolism of Love Conquers All. Cupid stands astride musical instruments, sketch books, architects tools, literature, music scripts, a globe (so the world) a crown (so earthly authority) a suit of armour (so war).
Cupid is neatly idealised. By which I mean cute cheeky face, but a rather chunky torso for a prepubescent boy. It was no surprise to read that Caravaggio was assumed to be gay, and that according to one seventeenth century writer, the model was his twelve year old servant and lover (although not clear that he was his lover when he was only 12). But does show you started work earlier in those days! The wings were also painted from a pair of real eagles' wings he had been given.
If you haven't been to the Wallace Collection it is well worth it for the breadth and quality of what is on show, from grand rooms, to armouries and a great picture gallery upstairs packed with Rubens and Rembrandt, Dutch masters and French Rococo



