The Rape of Ganymede (Rubens)

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Yearc.1636-38
Dimensions181 cm × 87.3 cm (71 in × 34.4 in)
The Rape of Ganymede
ArtistPeter Paul Rubens
Yearc.1636-38
TypeOil on canvas
Dimensions181 cm × 87.3 cm (71 in × 34.4 in)
LocationMuseo del Prado, Madrid, Spain

The Rape of Ganymede or The Abduction of Ganymede is a painting by the Flemish Baroque painter Peter Paul Rubens produced between 1636 and 1638 for the Spanish king Philip IV of Spain's hunting lodge.[1] The painting is based on a story recounted in classical poet Ovid's Metamorphoses (X, 155-161). It depicts the moment when the Roman supreme god Jupiter, acting through the form of an eagle, captures the young shepherd Ganymede and lifts him into the air.[2] It is in the collection of the Museo del Prado in Madrid. The dramatic scene gave Rubens ample opportunity to show his skill in depicting a lively scene around a beautiful male nude.[3]

The context and name of the work is shared with an earlier Rubens c.1611-1612, which instead portrays Ganymede's arrival on Olympus with the previous cup-bearer, Hebe, handing him her vessel as a banquet begins in the background.[4]

The painting depicts the abduction of the beautiful Trojan youth, Ganymede, by Jupiter who appears in the form an eagle. The homoerotic story which goes back to Classical stories first recounted by Homer and Virgil recounts how the supreme God Jupiter falls madly in love with a beautiful young man. The account most familiar to artists in Rubens' time was that as told by Ovid in his Metamorphoses: “The king of the gods Jupiter once burned with love for the Phrygian Ganymede, and something was found which Jove would rather be than what he was. Still he did not deign to take the form of any bird save that which could bear his thunderbolts [the eagle]. Without delay he cleft the air on his lying wings and stole away the Trojan boy, who even now, though against the will of Juno, mingles the nectar and attends the cups of Jove.”[3] This contrasts against Virgil's version where Jupiter sends a regular eagle without taking on the form of a bird himself, which may have influenced the work as well.[5]

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