Arnold Bcklin Pan Greek genitive is the Greek
Arnold Böcklin , Pan (Greek Παν, genitive Πανος) is the Greek god who watches over shepherds and their flocks. He has the hindquarters, legs, and horns of a goat, in the same manner as a satyr. The parentage of Pan is unclear; in some myths he is the son of Zeus, though generally he is the son of Hermes (sometimes with Dryope). His mother is said to be a nymph. His nature and name are alluring, particularly since often his name is mistakenly thought to be identical to the Greek word pan, meaning "all", when in fact the name of the god is derived from the word pa-on, which means "herdsman" and shares its prefix with the modern English word "pasture". In many ways he seems to be identical to Protogonus/Phanes.
God Pan dancing. Detail of the marble sarcophagus. From the sepulchre of the Calpurnii Pisones, Via Salaria (1 st CE) Museo Nazionale Romano Terme di Diocleziano), Rome. )
Usually depicted with the head, chest and arms of a man and with the legs, horns and ears of a goat, Pan prances through the fertile countryside playing his seven-reed pipe in wild abandon. His piping can be as soft and seductive as the breeze, but when he's angered, his bellow and howl can be heard for miles. He fought with the Olympians against the Titans of Kronos (Cronos) and for his terrifying war cry, his name is still associated with PANic fear. Peter Paul Rubens , Pan Reclining , possibly 1610
Correggio (Antonio Allegri) (1489 -1534) Pan blowing into a shell. Grisaille lunette. Camera di S. Paolo, Parma, Italy
Pan in Versailles Pan in Schloss Benrath
Marble statue of Pan, Roman, from a villa at Monte Cagnolo, near Rome, c 45 -c 25 BC. British Museum, London The dancing faun. 1 st c. BCE to 4 th c. CE. Palazzo Borghese, Rome, Italy Tribolo Niccolo (1500 -1550) Bronze Pan playing pipes. Museo Nazionale del Bargello, Florence, Italy
. נולד וחי בארקדיה , פאן הוא בנו של האל הרמס אביו לקחו אמנם לאולימפוס כדי שישעשע את בהתנהגותו המבדחת ובנגינתו , האלים בצורתו אך פאן העדיף את ארקדיה. הנפלאה בחליל . ושב לארץ שם הצטרף לפמליתו של דיוניסוס Dionysos drives a chariot drawn by a pair of tigers. He is accompanied by a Mainas Nymphe, Nike (victory) who crowns him with a wreath, and old Seilenos. Pan leaps before the chariot. The scene is surrounded by vines hung with fruit. Mosaic , 3 rd AD Bardo Museum, Tunisia
Girodet de Roussy-Trioson, Anne Louis (1767 -1824 ) Nymphs dancing to the sound of Pan's flute. Chateau, Compiegne, France
Pan was originally an Arcadian god, and Arcadia was always the principal seat of his worship. Arcadia was a district of primitive mountain folk, whom other Greeks disdained, as the Olympians patronized Pan. Arcadian hunters used to scourge the statue of the god if they had been disappointed in the chase (Theocritus. vii. 107). DUBOIS Ambroise Sacrifice à Pan
Pan inspired sudden fear in lonely places, Panic (panikon deima). Apparently when Pan was a newborn, the first onlookers saw the ugly "child" and ran in fright (or panic). Of course, Pan was later known for his music, capable of arousing inspiration, sexuality, or panic, depending on his intentions. Pavement mosaic with the head of Pan. Roman artwork, Antonine period, 138/192 AD. Credit line From a villa in Genazzano wich may have belonged to Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus. Palazzo Massimo alle Terme (Museo Nazionale Romano), Rome, Italy
DIONYSOS & PAN Dionysos stands haloed and holding a drining cup and thyrsos rod beside the goat-legged god Pan. Mosaic , 4 th AD, Imperial Roman Shahba Museum, Shahba, Syria
Pan and a Bacchante, from Ahnas. Limestone relief, 3 rd-4 th CE. Coptic Museum, Cairo, Egypt
Detail of Pan with a wine jug from a mosaic depicting the procession of the god Dionysos Antakya Museum, Antakya, Turkey Mosaic, From Daphne near Antioch , C 2 nd - C 3 rd AD
The rustic god Pan sits on a mountain rock, playing a set of his namesake pan-pipes. The god is shown with the horns of a goat, but is otherwise human in form. He has an animal skin cloak draped over one arm. Fresco, Pompeii, House of Jason , 1 st AD Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli,
THE ELDER & YOUNGER PAN Detail of two Panes from a painting depicting Dionysos and his retinue of gods. The older bearded Pan carries a wineskin across his shoulders, the other, a youthful figure, plays the panpipes. Facing the pair stands the Nymphe Ekho. Attic Red Figure Hydria, 400 - 300 BC. British Museum, London.
. פאן נחשב גם אל הפוריות POUSSIN, Nicolas The Triumph of Pan , 1636 National Gallery, London Number of literary and visual references are combined in this pagan celebration. Nymphs and satyrs with goats carouse before a term of the god Pan. His identity may here be combined with that of Priapus. Pan was god of woods and fields, and Priapus a deity of gardens; both are associated with fertility and Bacchic ritual. The instruments played, the sacrificial deer, and the props in the foreground are either attributes of these figures or linked with such rites. They include panpipes, theatrical masks (comedy, tragedy and satire), and a shepherds staff.
The goatish god Pan copulating with a nanny-goat. from the Villa dei Papiri in Herculaneum. Period : Imperial Roman Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli
Giulio CARPIONI La Leçon de musique de Pan Vers 1660 - 1670 ? Signorelli, Luca (1441 -1523) The School of Pan. Destroyed in 1945. Gemaeldegalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin
CLODION , Vestal Presenting a Young Woman at the Altar of Pan about 1770 - 1775 J. Paul Getty Museum
POUSSIN, Nicolas Bacchanal before a Statue of Pan , 1631 -33 National Gallery, London
Castiglione, Giovanni Benedetto Satyrs Bringing Gifts to Pan. 1640. Russian State Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia Krater with Pan and Maenad (detail). Museo Archeologico Eoliano, Lipari, Italy
Jean-Victor BERTIN Landscape with an offering to the god Pan , 1816
Ricci, Sebastiano (1659 -1734 ) Bacchanal in honor of Pan. Accademia, Venice, Italy
: מקורות http: //www. mlahanas//Pan. http: //www. theoi. com//Pan. http: //he. wikipedia. org/pan http: //www. google. com/pan http: //www. artres. com/Pan http: //www. artcyclopedia. com/Pan http: //commons. wikimedia. org/Pan http: //arts-graphiques. louvre. fr/Pan אסף פלר : עריכה Leon Bakst , Nijinsky in The Afternoon of a Faun
אני מזמין אותך לבקר , שלום לך באתר המצגות שלי ולהנות ממצגות נוספות אסף פלר , להתראות http: //assaffeller. com Mirror with satyr or Pan head, late 4 th century BCE. Late Classical or Hellenistic. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
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