Hercules fighting Nemean lion
Hercules fighting Nemean lion is a 1634 work by Francisco de Zurbarán. It is conserved in the Museo del Prado.
Hercules fighting Nemean lion | |
---|---|
Spanish: Hércules lucha con el león de Nemea | |
Artist | Francisco de Zurbarán |
Completion date | 1634 |
Dimensions | 151 × 166 cm |
Location | Museo del Prado. |
Description
The painting depicts Heracles fighting the Nemean Lion. The Spanish art critic Soria suggests a comparison with a woodcut fashioned by Cornelis Cort after a work by Frans Floris, based on the hero's position. The rocky setting was designed according to a woodcut by Barthel Beham: Fighting versus centaur (1542).
It is one of series of 10 artworks on the Labours of Hercules commissioned by Philip IV of Spain for the decoration of the Queens Hall's in the Buen Retiro Palace. The series is now on show at the Museo del Prado.
Bibliography
- Juan Antonio Gaya Nuño et Tiziana Frati, La obra pictórica de Zurbarán, éditions Planeta, Barcelone, 1988, ISBN 84-320-2866-5 p. 131-132.
gollark: Food, water, shelter, heating, smartphones.
gollark: But you want lots of things.
gollark: Then you want food, I guess.
gollark: If GTech™ deployed viral photosynthetic genes™, people would stop wanting it.
gollark: It's valuable because people want it and will exchange things for it, that's all.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.