23 Works of The Art surrounding the Greek myth of Danaë and the Shower of Gold

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Danaë reclining with Zeus as the shower of gold depicted on a vase 450-425 BC

In Greek mythology, Danaë was a daughter of King Acrisius of Argos and his wife Queen Eurydice. She was the mother of the hero Perseus by Zeus. She was sometimes credited with founding the city of Ardea in Latium during the Bronze Age.

 Danaë became a popular subject in the early 1900s for many artists; she was used as the quintessential symbol of divine love, and transcendence.

Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn 026.jpg
Danaë 1636
Oil on canvas
185 cm × 203 cm (73 in × 80 in)

Danaë is Rembrandt's painting from the collection of Pierre Crozat which since the 18th century has resided in the Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia. It is a life-sized depiction of the character Danaë from Greek mythology, the mother of Perseus. She is presumably depicted as welcoming Zeus, who impregnated her in the form of a shower of gold. Given that this is one of Rembrandt's most magnificent paintings, it is not out of the question that he cherished it, but it also may have been difficult to sell because of its eight-by-ten-foot size. Although the artist's wife Saskia was the original model for Danaë, Rembrandt later changed the figure's face to that of his mistress Geertje Dircx. More

Disappointed by his lack of male heirs, Acrisius asked an oracle if this would change. The oracle told him that he would be killed by his daughter's son. She was childless and, meaning to keep her so, he shut her up in a bronze tower or cave. But Zeus came to her in the form of golden rain, that streamed in through the ceiling and down into her womb. Soon after, their child Perseus was born.

Titian 
Danaë with Eros, 1544. 
120 cm × 172 cm.
Oil on Canvas

This painting shows the youthful figure of Eros alongside Danaë. Known as "Danaë and the Shower of Gold" series, comprised of at least five oil-on-canvas paintings by the Venetian master Titian, completed between 1553 and 1556. The first version, now in Naples, was painted between 1544-46.

Titian
Danaë
Oil con Canvas
129 cm × 180 cm

Danaë with Nursemaid or Danaë Receiving the Golden Rain, 1553–1554. Here, an aging nursemaid has replaced Eros, while the cloth covering Danaë's upper thigh is absent, leaving her naked. 

Titian and his workshop produced at least five versions of the painting, which vary to degrees. The dog resting at Danaë's side is absent in some versions, while her companion is a god in some and a haggish nursemaid in others. In all, Danaë is a depicted as a voluptuous figure. Her legs are open in all, with her left leg arched; this being a central painterly motif in each. More

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Correggio
Danaë c. 1531
Oil on canvas
161 cm × 193 cm (63 in × 76 in)

Correggio portrays Danäe lying on a bed, while a child Eros undresses her as gold rains from a cloud. At the foot of the bed, two putti are testing gold and lead arrows against a stone. The work was commissioned by the Duke of Mantua Federico II Gonzaga, as a part of a series portraying Jupiter's loves, perhaps destined to the Ovid Hall in the Palazzo Te of Mantua. After Federico's death it went to Spain. More

Unwilling to provoke the wrath of the gods or the Furies by killing his offspring, Acrisius cast Danaë and Perseus into the sea in a wooden chest. The sea was calmed by Poseidon and at the request of Zeus the pair survived.

Danae
Artemisia Gentileschi
Danae 1612 ca.
Oil on Canvas
40,5×52,5 cm

The foreground of the painting is preoccupied by Danae naked on a bed. Her ​​right fist clenching some gold coins. In her lap are some more coins. They symbolize the seduction by Zeus. The work has a strong erotic charge, which in many other representations of Danae is less apparent. In a painting by Tintoretto, Zeus drops some coins in the lap of the king's daughter, but she does not seem to derive any pleasure.

In the background is a servant, clearly taken from a painting by Titian, which captures the gold coins in her dress. The clothing and headscarves of the maid contrast with Danae's nakedness, which is framed by the long golden tresses falling along her arm.


Artemisia was not yet twenty years old when she completed this painting. More

Orazio Gentileschi (1563–1639), The father of Artemisia
Danaë circa 1623
Oil on canvas
Height: 163.5 cm (64.4 in). Width: 228.5 cm (90 in).

They washed ashore on the island of Seriphos, where they were taken in by Dictys – the brother of King Polydectes – who raised Perseus to manhood. 

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Tintoretto, 
Danaë c. 1570
Oil on canvas
142 cm x 182 cm

Danae, according to tradition, appears naked, lying on a bed. Like the Danae of Titian, Tintoretto participates in the scene as a servant, but here the similarities end.

In this work, the servant is not an old woman, and for Danae, the painter used Veronica Franco, poet and Venetian courtesan as a model. The young servant is focused on a specific task: to collect the falling money. A striking element of the work is the dog asleep in the lower left corner, traditionally a symbol of conjugal fidelity, such as in the Arnolfini Portrait by Jan van Eyck . In the picture, where Zeus commits adultery with the wife, the dog has a somewhat ironic tone.

Tintoretto frequently resorted to the archetypal female blond woman in his mythological works and the Old Testament , as shown in this painting. More

The King was charmed by Danaë but she had no interest in him. Consequently he agreed not to marry her only if her son would bring him the head of the Gorgon Medusa. Using Athena's shield, Hermes's winged sandals and Hades' helmet of invisibility, Perseus was able to evade Medusa's gaze and decapitate her.

Alexandre Jacques Chantron (1891) Danae.jpg
Alexandre-Jacques Chantron
'Danae' being visited by Zeus, as a cloud of gold dust (1891)
Oil on Canvas
1.73 x 1.165 m

Later, after Perseus brought back Medusa's head and rescued Andromeda, the oracle's prophecy came true. He started for Argos, but learning of the prophecy instead went to Larissa, where athletic games were being held. By chance, an aging Acrisius was there and Perseus accidentally struck him on the head with his javelin (or discus), fulfilling the prophecy. More

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Léon Comerre (1850–1916) 
Danaë and the Shower of Gold
circa 1908
Oil on canvas

Danae symbolizes the land suffering from drought and on which a fertile rain down from the sky.

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Gustav Klimt
Danaë 1907
Oil On Canvas
77 cm × 83 cm (30 in × 33 in)

Created by Gustav Klimt in 1907, Danaë is an example of Symbolism. More

Andrea Casali (1705–1784) 
Danaë and the Golden Shower, ca. 1750
Oil on canvas
111.4 × 153.5 cm (43.9 × 60.4 in)

Antonio Bellucci (1654–1726) 
Danaë, between 1700 and 1705
Oil on canvas
Height: 149 cm (58.7 in). Width: 159 cm (62.6 in)

Gaspar Becerra
Danae receiving the Golden Rain
circa 1560
Ceiling panel 

Carolus-Duran (1837–1917) 
Danae
circa 1900
Oil on canvas
100 × 127 cm (39.4 × 50 in)

Jacob van Loo (1614–1670)
Danae
circa 1650
Oil on canvas
73 × 64 cm (28.7 × 25.2 in)

Jean Mosnier
Danae

Anonymous Dutch painter
Danae receiving the shower of gold
17th century
Oil on Canvas
30 x 41 cm

German
Danae, late 18th century
oil on canvas
58 x 72 cm

Flemish
Danaë and the golden rain
Oil on canvas, 
45 x 52.5 cm. 
18th or 19th century

Giovanni Battista Tiepolo (1696–1770)
Jupiter and Danaë
c. 1736
Oil on canvas

File:Hendrick Goltzius 022.jpg
Hendrik Goltzius (1558–1617)
Danae receiving Jupiter as a shower of gold/ The Sleeping Danae Being Prepared to Receive Jupiter.
Date 1603
Oil on canvas
173.3 × 200 cm (68.2 × 78.7 in)

File:Jacques Vigoureux Duplessis - Painted Fire Screen - Walters 372479.jpg
Jacques Vigoureux Duplessis
Painted Fire Screen
Danaë 1700
Oil on fabric
Dimensions
87 × 117 cm (34.3 × 46.1 in)

Originally mounted as a screen to cover a fireplace during warm weather, in this exotic painting the artist has transformed the hearth into a miniature stage. Three fanciful Chinese characters hold aloft a circular screen on which is depicted the mythological story of Zeus showering Danaë with gold. A pair of figures, painted in grisaille on the side wall, incise their names on a tree trunk, a motif symbolizing eternal love. The fire screen is the earliest recorded work of Vigoureux Duplessis, an artist who was associated with decorative projects for the Paris Opera, the Royal Academy of Music, and the Beauvais Tapestry Manufactor. More




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