| Danaë (1892) |
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Painting date: 1892 This painting was stolen from the home of Mrs. Julia Ellsworth Ford, its New York owner in October 1947. The painting was illustrated in the 1892 Academy Notes; its entry reads: "The fishermen of Seriphus have rescued Danaë and her babe Perseus from their boat. Danaë stands erect among the men clasping her child, her hair is dishevelled and her draperies disordered."
In Greek mythology Danaë was the mother of the Greek hero Perseus and the daughter of Acrisius, king of Argos in the Pelopennese. It had been foretold that her son would cause the death of Acrisius, so he locked her in a bronze tower. But Zeus visited her as a shower of golden rain and Perseus was conceived. The king banished the mother and son by locking them in a chest which he then cast out to sea. Waterhouse's painting illustrates their rescue from the chest by King Polydectes. The myth continues that later, seeing Perseus as an obstacle to his love for Danaë, King Polydectes sent him to fetch the head of the Gorgon Medusa. The gods aided Perseus, and he slew Medusa. Fleeing from the other Gorgons, Perseus was refused aid by Atlas who was turned into a stone mountain by Medusa's head. On his way home, Perseus rescued Andromeda and married her. Later, while competing in a discus contest, Perseus accidentally killed Acrisius, thus fulfilling the prophecy. Sources: Encyclopaedia Britannica and Classical Mythology: the Ancient Myths and Legends of Greece and Rome. |
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