Hercules and Deianira
c. 1470 painting by Antonio del Pollaiuolo
Hercules and Deianira is an oil painting by Antonio del Pollaiuolo, executed c. 1470, originally on panel but later transferred to canvas. It measures 54.6 cm (21.4 in) by 79.2 cm (31.1 in), slightly larger than his other surviving mythological paintings, but still fairly small.
It shows the rape of Deianira by the centaur Nessus, with her husband Hercules drawing a bow at the right to shoot Nessus. It is now in the Yale University Art Gallery in New Haven, Connecticut.[1]
References
- ^ "Catalogue entry". Archived from the original on 2010-12-03.
- 2023 museum page
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Antonio del Pollaiuolo
- Elevation of the Magdalen (c. 1460)
- Hercules Slaying Antaeus (c. 1460)
- Profile Portrait of a Young Lady (c. 1465; attributed)
- Tobias and the Angel ✻ (c. 1465–1470)
- Cardinal of Portugal's Altarpiece ✻ (c. 1466–1467)
- Hercules and Deianira (c. 1470)
- Hercules and the Hydra (c. 1475)
- Martyrdom of Saint Sebastian ✻ (c. 1475)
- Battle of the Nudes (c. 1465–1475)
✻ Collaboration with Piero del Pollaiuolo
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