Friedrich Nietzsche, Beyond Good and Evil (1886)Christianity gave Eros poison to drink: he did not die of it, certainly, but degenerated—to Vice.
Franz von Stuck’s The Sin is one of the defining artworks of its era, the fin de siècle – a time marked by heated moral debates about sexuality and gender.
In alluring, shadowy colours and stark contrasts, it depicts a naked woman and a glistening snake winding its heavy body around her, its head with bared fangs resting upon her pale shoulder.
The motif alludes to the biblical story of the fall from grace: Eve accepting the apple from the snake, tempting Adam to eat of it, too – leading to the metaphorical loss of innocence.
In analogy to the biblical story, the painting depicts a nude woman in league with the demonic snake, tempting man to give in to her erotic allure: to sin.
The Sin is regarded as one of the classic depictions of the femme fatale: the archetype of the mysterious, irresistible and insatiable woman, leading men to their doom
By casting her as a villainous seductress, all responsibility is stripped from the male and rests on the woman alone. As such, it is often considered a sexist stereotype – but if we look closely, it can tell us much about its time.
In the 1890s, when Stuck first painted The Sin, women began to demand sexual equality.
At the time, it was common for men to have sex before marriage – and frequent brothels or have affairs after. Women, on the other hand, were supposed not to possess the slightest shred of carnal knowledge before their wedding night. Even Friedrich Nietzsche, the rebel-philosopher, protested this convention – and so did a number of fearless, educated women.
The Sin and its great success – Stuck painted twelve versions of it – can be seen as a response to these debates.
For one thing, it reflected the fear of sexually demanding women, whose numbers would only rise in the course of these debates. Furthermore, femmes fatales such as The Sin also dealt with ideas of shame: by becoming the seduced – rather than the seducer – he who engaged with these women could cast aside his own responsibility and guilt.
Yet there were also women who rejected the idea of sexuality as sinful and negative.
Many of them were writers, in whose stories and poems the snake or the devil himself were sometimes recast as symbols of sexual liberation. By freeing themselves from notions such as sinfulness or shame, they recast eroticism in a positive light. The Sin might tempt us to do the same: still today, it lures us to step closer, to investigate our own relationship with desire.
We framed this era-defining artwork with our signature border and finished the edge in Marian, a deep blue. The hem is hand-rolled and stitched in France.

