The Enigma of the Hour


The Enigma of the Hour is a painting by the Italian metaphysical painter Giorgio de Chirico. He created the work during his early period, in Florence, when he focused on metaphysical depictions of town squares and other urban environments.
The Enigma depicts an urban scene with the classical architecture and angular lighting that are de Chirico's hallmarks. Several figures around the scene have vague features, to give the sense that they are absent. Above the scene is a large clock that reads five minutes to three. Luca Cottini referred to the clock as "... the paradox of an 'eternal present,' located on the edge of a-temporal revelation and moving temporality, and the enigma of its nature."
Peter G. Toohey has asserted the figure in white represents Odysseus.