Monday, June 22, 2026

Predators

Ancient Greek Sculptor
Lion
325 BC
marble
Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri


Anonymous German Sculptor
Lion
15th century
bronze
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford

attributed to Baccio Bandinelli
Hercules and the Nemean Lion
1518
marble
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford

Jean de Gourmont the Elder
Samson and the Lion
ca. 1530-40
engraving
British Museum

Bartholomäus Reiter
St Corbinian and the Bear
1609
drawing (print study)
British Museum

François Anguier
Lion attacking Boar
ca. 1661-63
marble tomb element
Musée du Louvre

Pietro da Cortona
Daniel in the Lions' Den
1663-64
oil on canvas (altarpiece)
Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice

Anonymous French Makers
Basin with Lion Masks and Drunken Bacchus
ca. 1680
maiolica
Musée du Louvre

Laurent Delvaux
Samson vanquishing the Lion
1755
marble
Musée du Louvre

attributed to Giuseppe Franchi
Lion
(one of pair carved in Rome, after antique Medici lions)
ca. 1775-1800
marble
Musée du Louvre

Francesco Hayez
Self Portrait with Tiger and Lion
ca. 1830
oil on panel
Museo Poldi Pezzoli, Milan

Edward Poynter
Egyptian Granite Lion at the British Museum
ca. 1867
drawing
British Museum

Jean-Léon Gérôme
Lion in the Desert
ca. 1885
oil on canvas
Buffalo AKG Art Museum, New York

Ludwig Hohlwein
Munich Zoo (Leopard and Panther)
1912
lithograph (poster)
Museum of Modern Art, New York

Cecilia Vicuña
Black Panther and Me (ii) Bogotá
1978
oil on canvas
Museum of Modern Art, New York

Thornton Dial
The Longest Tail Tiger in the United States
1989
acrylic paint and rope on panel
Milwaukee Art Museum, Wisconsin

Tom Knechtel
Lion devouring a Monkey
1995
drawing
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

    Such expressions as: 'to subsist in bones and be but pyramidally extant''sad and sepulchral pitchers which have no joyful voices' 'predicament of chimaeras' 'the irregularities of vain glory, and wild enormities of ancient magnanimity' – are examples of this consummate mastery of language, examples of which, with a multitude of others, singly deserve whole hours of delicious gustation, whole days of absorbed and exquisite worship.  It is pleasant to start out for a long walk with such a splendid phrase upon one's lips as: 'According to the ordainer of order and mystical mathematicks of the City of Heaven,' to go for miles and miles with the marvellous syllables still rich upon the inward ear, and to return home with them in triumph.

– Lytton Strachey on Sir Thomas Browne (1906)