Sunday, December 28, 2025

Antiquity (Baroque Views)

Jacob Jordaens
Figure Study for Neptune
ca. 1617-20
drawing
British Museum


Willem Panneels after Peter Paul Rubens
Nessus abducting Dejanira
1630
etching
British Museum

Francis Cleyn
Birth of Jupiter
ca. 1630-40
drawing
British Museum

Jan van Bronckhorst after Cornelis van Poelenburgh
Juno in Clouds
ca. 1636
etching
British Museum

Matthäus Merian the Elder
Flora directing Nymphs with Garlands
(half title-page to Florilegium Renovatum)
1641
etching and engraving
Museum für Angewandte Kunst, Vienna

Grégoire Huret
Mars and Minerva with Time asleep and Fame flying
(half title-age to La Science Héroïque)
1644
engraving
British Museum

Giovanni Pietro Possenti
Hercules rescuing Dejanira from Nessus
ca. 1640-50
etching
British Museum

Anonymous Italian Artist
Apollo and Daphne
17th century
drawing
British Museum

Nicolaes Berchem
The Infancy of Zeus
1648
oil on canvas
Mauritshuis, The Hague

Abraham van Diepenbeeck
Pandora surrounded by Olympian Gods
ca. 1655
drawing
Städel Museum, Frankfurt

Ciro Ferri
Hercules at the Crossroads
ca. 1670-80
drawing
British Museum

Giuseppe Diamantini
Composition with Saturn and Rhea
ca. 1675
etching
British Museum

Gérard de Lairesse
Bacchanal
ca. 1675
drawing (print study)
British Museum

Pietro Liberi
Minerva defeating Giants
ca. 1676
drawing (study for unexecuted print)
British Museum

attributed to Giulio Carpioni
Orpheus playing to Satyrs and Amorini
before 1678
drawing
British Museum

Johann Heiss
Triumph of the Sun
ca. 1680-90
oil on canvas
private collection
(sold by Galerie Neuse Kunsthandel in Bremen, 2021)

Giuseppe Maria Rolli after Lorenzo Pasinelli
Sibyl with Putto
ca. 1690
etching
British Museum

from Of the Answers of the Oracle of Apollo at Delphos to Croesus King of Lydia

    In vayne wee looke for open sense in oracles, there was not only obscuritie in the recesse butt in the outside of Delphos; and the two letters EI set over the entrance of it have puzzled learned conjectures to expound the meaning of them. And to speake in generall of Oracles and Gentile divinations, there was no uniformitie in their deliveries; they being sometimes made with that obscuritie as argued a fearefull prophecy; sometimes so plainly as might conclude a spirit of divinity; sometimes morally, deterring from vice and villany; another time vitiously, and in the spirit of blood and crueltie; observably modest in that civill Enigma and periphrasis of that part which old Numa would playnely name when hee advised Aegeus not to drawe out his foot before, untill hee arrived on the Athenian ground; whereas another time the oracle seemed too literall in that unseemely epithite unto Cyanus King of Cyprus; and putt a beastly trouble upon Aegypt to find out the urine of a true virgin to cure the kings eyes. 

– Sir Thomas Browne (1656)