- Source: Erichthonius Discovered by the Daughters of Cecrops (Jordaens)
Erichthonius Discovered by the Daughters of Cecrops is a large 1617 oil-on-canvas painting by the Flemish painter Jacob Jordaens, now in the Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp.
The artist was then aged only 24 and still heavily influenced by Peter Paul Rubens, who had produced a version of the same scene in 1616. The work shows Hephaestus's son Erichthonius of Athens being discovered by the daughters of Cecrops I, derived from Ovid's Metamorphoses and the Library of Pseudo-Apollodorus. Jordaens returned to the same subject in 1640 in a work now in Vienna's Kunsthistorisches Museum.
Sources
Jordaens, la gloire d'Anvers, collection Beaux-Arts, Petit Palais, September 2013
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Erichthonius Discovered by the Daughters of Cecrops (Jordaens)
- Erichthonius Discovered by the Daughters of Cecrops
- Helena Fourment
- Peter Paul Rubens
- The Three Graces (Rubens, Madrid)
- 1616 in art
- Rubenshuis
- Deucalion and Pyrrha (Rubens)
- The Judgement of Paris (Rubens)
- The Rape of Ganymede (Rubens)