COUSTOU Nicolas Apollo Daphne 1711 14 Muse du

  • Slides: 65
Download presentation
COUSTOU, Nicolas, Apollo & Daphne, 1711 -14, Musée du Louvre, Paris

COUSTOU, Nicolas, Apollo & Daphne, 1711 -14, Musée du Louvre, Paris

Harriet Goodhue Hosmer Daphne, 1854 The Metropolitan Museum of Art , New York

Harriet Goodhue Hosmer Daphne, 1854 The Metropolitan Museum of Art , New York

Apollon & Daphne Mosaic , Antioch, House of Menander, C 2 nd -C 3

Apollon & Daphne Mosaic , Antioch, House of Menander, C 2 nd -C 3 rd AD Antakya Museum, Antakya, Turkey Daphne Pursued by Apollo Surrounded by Hunting Scenes, Signed by Senius Felix, Citizen of Pouzzoles Roman Mosaic, 3 rd century AD Musee Departemental des Antiquites, Rouen, France

Apollo and Daphne Detail of a mosaic from a triclinium of a Roman house.

Apollo and Daphne Detail of a mosaic from a triclinium of a Roman house. Musee Archeologique, El Jemm (Thysdrus), Tunisia

Giovanni Battista Toepolo, Apollo Pursuing Daphne , 1755 -60, National Gallery of Art, Washington,

Giovanni Battista Toepolo, Apollo Pursuing Daphne , 1755 -60, National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC

TIEPOLO, Giovanni Battista Apollo and Daphne, 1744 -45 Musée du Louvre, Paris

TIEPOLO, Giovanni Battista Apollo and Daphne, 1744 -45 Musée du Louvre, Paris

Daphne (nymph pursued by Apollo, relief, limestone, 5 th - 6 th century AD

Daphne (nymph pursued by Apollo, relief, limestone, 5 th - 6 th century AD Coptic Period Egyptian Musée du Louvre Paris Apollo and Daphne. Ivory. Coptic art, 5 th century. Museo Nazionale, Ravenna

Massimiliano Soldani Apollo and Daphne , c. 1700 terracotta sculpture The Cleveland Museum of

Massimiliano Soldani Apollo and Daphne , c. 1700 terracotta sculpture The Cleveland Museum of Art

Daphne From the painting by Deverial Lynn Jenkins, Daphne

Daphne From the painting by Deverial Lynn Jenkins, Daphne

John Singer Sargent 1910 Statue of Daphne, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

John Singer Sargent 1910 Statue of Daphne, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Paolo Veronese (Caliari ) Apollo and Daphne, c. 1565 -70.

Paolo Veronese (Caliari ) Apollo and Daphne, c. 1565 -70.

POUSSIN, Nicolas, Apollo and Daphne, 1625, Alte Pinakothek, Munich

POUSSIN, Nicolas, Apollo and Daphne, 1625, Alte Pinakothek, Munich

Jakob Auer Apollo and Daphne, 1688/90 Kunsthistorisches Museum , Vienna

Jakob Auer Apollo and Daphne, 1688/90 Kunsthistorisches Museum , Vienna

Cornelis de Vos (1584 -1651), Apollo Chasing Daphne

Cornelis de Vos (1584 -1651), Apollo Chasing Daphne

Jean-Etienne Liotard Apollo and Daphne Rijksmuseum , Amsterdam

Jean-Etienne Liotard Apollo and Daphne Rijksmuseum , Amsterdam

Rosemarie Beck Apollo and Daphne, 1982 -83,

Rosemarie Beck Apollo and Daphne, 1982 -83,

When the word "love" comes up, Daphne flees Apollo, hit by Amor's arrow, cannot

When the word "love" comes up, Daphne flees Apollo, hit by Amor's arrow, cannot understand it. ( Ovid, Met. I, 474 -476) Giuseppe Chiari, Apollo Chasing Daphne

Apollo and Daphne, Master of Celtis-Illustration. From: Conrad Celtis: Quatuor libri amorum, Nuremberg 1502

Apollo and Daphne, Master of Celtis-Illustration. From: Conrad Celtis: Quatuor libri amorum, Nuremberg 1502 Cambiaso, Luca (1527 -1585) Apollo pursuing Daphne. Louvre, Paris, France

Follower of François Boucher, Apollo and Daphne

Follower of François Boucher, Apollo and Daphne

Mantegna, Andrea Der Sieg der Tugend , 1504 Musée du Louvre, Paris

Mantegna, Andrea Der Sieg der Tugend , 1504 Musée du Louvre, Paris

Daphne and Apollo by Trixis

Daphne and Apollo by Trixis

Jean-Francois de Troy Apollo and Daphne, Circa 1728 Museum of the Academy of Arts,

Jean-Francois de Troy Apollo and Daphne, Circa 1728 Museum of the Academy of Arts, Petrograd

Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 20. 2 (trans. Jones) (Greek travelogue C 2 nd

Pausanias, Description of Greece 8. 20. 2 (trans. Jones) (Greek travelogue C 2 nd A. D. ) : "The Ladon [of Arkadia] is the most lovely river in Greece, and is also famous for the legend of Daphne that the poets tell. . . Leukippos fell in love with Daphne, but despaired of winning her to be his wife by an open courtship, as she avoided all the male sex. The following trick occurred to him by which to get her. Leukippos was growing his hair long for the river Alpheios. Brading his hair as though he were a maiden, and putting on woman’s clothes, he came to Daphne and said that he was a daughter of Oinomaos, and would like to share her hunting. As he was thought to be a maiden, surpassed the other maidens in nobility of birth and skill in hunting, and was besides most assiduous in this attentions, he drew Daphne into a deep friendship. The poets who sing of Apollon’s love for Daphne make an addition to the tale; that Apollon became jealous of Leukippos because of his success in his love. Forthwith Daphne and the other maidens conceived a longing to swim in the Ladon, and stripped Leukippos in spite of his reluctance. Then, seeing that he was no maid, they killed him with their javelins and daggers. " POLLAIUOLO, Antonio del Apollo and Daphne National Gallery, London

Arno Breker Apollo and Daphne

Arno Breker Apollo and Daphne

George Spencer Watson (1869 – 1934) , Apollo and Daphne

George Spencer Watson (1869 – 1934) , Apollo and Daphne

Tischbein, Johann Heinrich the Elder Apollo and Daphne. 1771. Museumslandschaft Hessen Kassel, Germany

Tischbein, Johann Heinrich the Elder Apollo and Daphne. 1771. Museumslandschaft Hessen Kassel, Germany

Joseph Mallord William Turner, Story of Apollo and Daphne, exhibited 1837, Tate Gallery, London

Joseph Mallord William Turner, Story of Apollo and Daphne, exhibited 1837, Tate Gallery, London

John Lessore, Apollo and Daphne circa 1985 Tate Gallery, London

John Lessore, Apollo and Daphne circa 1985 Tate Gallery, London

Philostratus, Life of Apollonius of Tyana 1. 16 (trans. Conybeare) (Greek biography C 1

Philostratus, Life of Apollonius of Tyana 1. 16 (trans. Conybeare) (Greek biography C 1 st to C 2 nd A. D. ) : " In Antiokhos (Antioch), Asia Minor is the temple Apollon Daphnaios (of the Laurel), to which the Assyrians attach the legend of Arkadia. For they say that Daphne the daughter of Ladon, there underwent her metamorphosis, and they have a river flowing there, the Ladon, and a laurel tree is worshipped by them which they say was substituted for the maiden. " MARATTI, Carlo Apollo Chasing Daphne, 1681 Musées Royaux des Beaux-Arts, Brussels

Houasse, Rene Antoine (1645 -1710) Apollo pursuing Daphne. Chateaux de Versailles et de Trianon,

Houasse, Rene Antoine (1645 -1710) Apollo pursuing Daphne. Chateaux de Versailles et de Trianon, Versailles, France Mazzoni, Sebastiano (? 1611 -78) Apollo & Daphne. Accademia, Ravenna, Italy

Parthenius, Love Romances 15 (trans. Gaselee) (Greek poet C 1 st B. C. )

Parthenius, Love Romances 15 (trans. Gaselee) (Greek poet C 1 st B. C. ) "From the elegiac poems of Diodoros of Elaia [unknown date] and the twenty-fifth book of Phylarkhos [Greek historian C 3 rd B. C. ] : This is how the story of Daphne, the daughter of Amyklas, is related. She used never to come down into the town, nor consort with the other maidens; but she got together a large pack of hounds and used to hunt, either in Lakonia, or sometimes going into the further mountains of the Peloponnese. For this reason she was very dear to Artemis, who gave her the gift of shooting straight. On one occasion she was traversing the country of Elis, and there Leukippos, the son of Oinomaus, fell in love with her; he resolved not to woo her in any common way, but assumed women's clothes, and, in the guise of a maiden, joined her hunt. And it so happened that she very soon became extremely fond of him, nor would she let him quit her side, embracing him and clinging to him at all times. But Apollon was also fired with love for the girl, and it was with feelings of anger and jealousy that he saw Leukippos always with her; he therefore put it into her mind to visit a stream with her attendant maidens, and there to bathe. On their arrival there, they all began to strip; and when they saw that Leukippos was unwilling to follow their example, they tore his clothes from him: but when they thus became aware of the deceit he had practiced and the plot he had devised against them, they all plunged their spears into his body. He, by the will of the gods, disappeared; but Daphne, seeing Apollon advancing upon her, took vigorously to flight; then, as he pursued her, she implored Zeus Theodore Chasseriau that she might be translated away from mortal sight, and she is Apollo and Daphne supposed to have become the bay tree which is called daphne after her. "

He tells her not to run so fast in order not to hurt herself.

He tells her not to run so fast in order not to hurt herself. Karl Peter Puille, 1800 (Ovid, Met. I, 511) He claims to be a master of stringed instruments. Edith Egger, 1999 ( Ovid, Met. I, 518)

Pausanias, Description of Greece 10. 7. 8 : "The reason why a crown of

Pausanias, Description of Greece 10. 7. 8 : "The reason why a crown of laurel is the prize for a Pythian victory is in my opinion simply and solely because the prevailing tradition has it that Apollon fell in love with the daughter of Ladon [i. e. Daphne]. " LEFÈVRE, Robert Pauline as Daphne Fleeing from Apollo, c. 1810

This painting was probably commissioned by Alfonso d'Este and may allude to his love

This painting was probably commissioned by Alfonso d'Este and may allude to his love affair with the lady-inwaiting Laura Dianti, after the death of his wife, Lucrezia Borgia, in 1519. The painting was inspired by the story of Apollo and Daphne in Ovid's Metamorphoses: Apollo is singing his love for Daphne and interrupts his performance at the moment when the nymph is transformed into a laurel tree (allusion to Laura) in the landscape on the left. Apollo accompanies his song on a viola da braccio, the instrument played by Duke Alfonso. Dossi, Dosso (c. 1479 -1542) Apollo and Daphne. Galleria Borghese, Rome

Francesco Albani, Apollo and Daphne, c. 1615 -1620, Musée du Louvre, Paris

Francesco Albani, Apollo and Daphne, c. 1615 -1620, Musée du Louvre, Paris

after Francesco Albani, Apollo and Daphne

after Francesco Albani, Apollo and Daphne

MURER, Christoph Apollo and Daphne, c. 1580 Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento

MURER, Christoph Apollo and Daphne, c. 1580 Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento

TREVISANI, Francesco Apollo and Daphne The Hermitage, St. Petersburg-

TREVISANI, Francesco Apollo and Daphne The Hermitage, St. Petersburg-

Andrea del Sarto (c. 1487 -1530) Apollo and Daphne. Coll. Corsini, Florence

Andrea del Sarto (c. 1487 -1530) Apollo and Daphne. Coll. Corsini, Florence

John William Waterhouse Apollo and Daphne, 1908

John William Waterhouse Apollo and Daphne, 1908

Paolodi Matteis, Apollo Pursuing Daphne, c. 1700 Loo, Jean Baptiste van , Apollo and

Paolodi Matteis, Apollo Pursuing Daphne, c. 1700 Loo, Jean Baptiste van , Apollo and Daphne, 1720 -1737 Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest

Domenichino Apollo pursuing Daphne National Gallery, London Jan Boeckhorst , Apollo and Daphne, 1640

Domenichino Apollo pursuing Daphne National Gallery, London Jan Boeckhorst , Apollo and Daphne, 1640 , J. Paul Getty Museum, L. A

Jean-Honore Fragonard, Apollo and Daphne

Jean-Honore Fragonard, Apollo and Daphne

POUSSIN, Nicolas, Apollo and Daphne, 1664, Musée du Louvre, Paris

POUSSIN, Nicolas, Apollo and Daphne, 1664, Musée du Louvre, Paris

Bozzetto for a ceiling fresco, probably ruined Subjects: Zeus with the Eagle and Juno

Bozzetto for a ceiling fresco, probably ruined Subjects: Zeus with the Eagle and Juno with the Peacock, Sun chariot , Apollo and Daphne, mythological hunting; Diana and Actaeon, c. 1740

Alexandre Benois, Apollo and Daphne, 1908

Alexandre Benois, Apollo and Daphne, 1908

David Park Daphne, 1959

David Park Daphne, 1959

Renate Wandel, Apollo and Daphne, 2000

Renate Wandel, Apollo and Daphne, 2000

Audrey Flack Colossal Head of Daphne, 1996 Jay De. Feo Daphne , 1958 Norton

Audrey Flack Colossal Head of Daphne, 1996 Jay De. Feo Daphne , 1958 Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, California

LU HONG, "Apollo and Daphne “, 2001

LU HONG, "Apollo and Daphne “, 2001

: מקורות http: //www. artcyclopedia/Daphne http: //www. pantheon/daphne http: //www. wga/apollo http: //mythologica/daphne http:

: מקורות http: //www. artcyclopedia/Daphne http: //www. pantheon/daphne http: //www. wga/apollo http: //mythologica/daphne http: //www. theoi/Daphne http: //www. latein-pagina/ovid http: //www. mlahanas/Daphne http: //commons. wikimedia/Daphne http: //www. artres/Daphne אסף פלר : עריכה Jamnitzer, Wenzel (1508 -1585) Daphne. Silver statuette, with coral. Musee de la Renaissance, Ecouen, France

, שלום לך אני מזמין אותך לבקר באתר המצגות שלי ולהנות ממצגות נוספות אסף

, שלום לך אני מזמין אותך לבקר באתר המצגות שלי ולהנות ממצגות נוספות אסף פלר , להתראות http: //assaffeller. com Schiavone, Andrea Apollo and Daphne, etching, ca. 1538 -40. The Metropolitan Museum of Art.