For thr lists, this is totally off-topic, and for everyone else, I figured 
somebpdy might know. I've already talked to my parents who, as most of you 
know, are artists and have info on just about every artist from the Italian 
Rennaissance. But this is really vague and it's bugging the heck out of me.

Adam told me once that an ex of his had a body type similar to a very 
particular painting, one featured in the National Gallery, and probably 
circa the Renaissance. Me, being artistically fascinated by the human 
figure, immediately tried to find said painting--not because I wanted to see 
what his ex-fiance looked like (he has a picture of her anyway, but wearing 
a coat)--but because I just wanted to see the painting.
Adam originally thought the work was called "The Bathers". But I checked all 
references under that title and then showed him. Wasn't it. Then he figured 
it was Boticelli's "Primavera", one of the greatest masterpieces of all 
time. But not quite. So I called my dad, and then Adam mentioned that the 
painting features two nude women next to a tree and a river. One of the 
women is lying down. The body type is generally of the period--not thin, but 
not chubby, with somewhat defined curves.
Now I just want to hunt this thing down--it would help if I had either the 
artist, the title, or maybe the year. Two nude women, a tree, and a river, 
with one woman reclining--any ideas??

~Joanna/Siren


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