Danaë

Description

Danaë’s father feared a prophecy that his grandson would kill him, so he imprisoned his daughter to protect her from suitors. Yet Jupiter, king of the gods, fell in love with Danaë, and he came to her in the form of gold streaming from the sky. Gentileschi adopted Caravaggio’s method of painting directly from models, pulled to the front of the picture plane, which gives the painting a startling, tangible quality. However, the graceful way he handled paint and human gestures lends the work a poetic quality unique to the artist.

Provenance

Possibly Charles Spencer, Fifth Earl of Sunderland (1706-1758);; Private collection, England;; Hazlitt Gallery (London, England], sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art, 1971.

Danaë

Orazio Gentileschi

c. 1623

Accession Number

1971.101

Medium

oil on canvas

Dimensions

Framed: 202.5 x 270 x 9 cm (79 3/4 x 106 5/16 x 3 9/16 in.); Unframed: 162 x 228.5 cm (63 3/4 x 89 15/16 in.)

Classification

Painting

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Leonard C. Hanna Jr. Fund