Saturday, January 3, 2026

Baptist

Vincenzo Foppa
St John the Baptist
ca. 1488-89
tempera on panel
Pinacoteca del Castello Sforzesca, Milan


Francesco di Giorgio Martini
St John the Baptist
ca. 1475-85
bronze plaquette
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Giampietrino (Giovanni Pietro Rizzoli)
St John the Baptist
before 1540
oil on panel
Museo de Arte de Ponce, Puerto Rico

Giovanni di Paolo
St John the Baptist
ca. 1435-40
tempera and gold on panel
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

Justus Glesker
St John the Baptist
ca. 1640-50
lindenwood
Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, Munich

Anonymous Italian Artist
St John the Baptist
16th century
oil on canvas
(formerly owned by the painter Ingres)
Musée Ingres-Bourdelle, Montauban

Anonymous Italian Artist
St John the Baptist as a Child
17th century
oil on canvas
Liechtenstein Museum, Vienna

Jusepe Leonardo
St John the Baptist
ca. 1635-40
oil on canvas
National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

Jusepe de Ribera
St John the Baptist
ca. 1624
oil on canvas
North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh

Paolo Veneziano
Head of St John the Baptist
ca. 1350
tempera and gold on panel
(altarpiece fragment)
Los Angeles County Museum of Art

Fra Bartolomeo
Studies for St John the Baptist
ca. 1511-12
drawing
Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam
 
Geertgen tot Sint Jans
St John the Baptist in the Wilderness
ca. 1484
oil on panel
Gemäldegalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

workshop of Sandro Botticelli
Christ Child with young St John the Baptist
ca. 1490
tempera on panel
National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

Giuseppe Caletti (il Cremonese)
Executioner with Head of St John the Baptist
ca. 1620-30
etching
Graphische Sammlung, ETH Zürich

Ubaldo Gandolfi
St John the Baptist in the Wilderness
before 1781
drawing
Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna

Benozzo Gozzoli
Feast of Herod and Beheading of St John the Baptist
ca. 1461-62
tempera on panel
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Pieter de Grebber
Herodias mutilating the head
of St John the Baptist, held by Salome

ca. 1640-50
oil on canvas
Wellcome Collection, London

from
 Iphigenia at Aulis

[Chorus of the women of Chalkis] 

I crept through the woods
Between the altars:
Artemis haunts the place.
Shame, scarlet, fresh-opened – a flower,
Strikes across my face.
And sudden – light upon shields,
Low huts – the armed Greeks,
Circles of horses.

I have longed for this, 
I have seen Ajax.
I have known Protesilaos
And that other Ajax – Salamis' light –

They counted ivory-discs.
They moved them – they laughed.
They were seated together
On the sand-ridges.

I have seen Palamed,
Child of Poseidon's child:
Divine Merion, a war-god,
Startling to men:
Island Odysseus from the sea-rocks:

And Nireos, most beautiful
Of beautiful Greeks.

                 *

A flash –
Achilles passed across the beach.
(He is the sea-woman's child
Chiron instructed.)
Achilles had strapped the wind
About his ankles,
He brushed rocks
The waves had flung.
He ran in armour.
He led the four-yoked chariot
He had challenged to the foot-race.
Emelos steered
And touched each horse with pointed goad. 

I saw the horses:
Each beautiful head was clamped with gold.

Silver streaked the centre horses.
They were fastened to the poles. 
The outriders swayed to the road-stead.
Colour spread up from ankle and steel-hoof.
Bronze flashed.

And Achilles, set with brass,
Bent forward,
Level with the chariot-rail.

– Euripides (485-406 BC), translated by H.D. (1919)