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Ixion Worshipping Hera Disguised as a Cloud

Maker (Swiss, active in England, 1741 - 1825)
Additional Title(s)
  • Venus and Aeneas
ClassificationsDRAWINGS
Daten.d.
Mediumpencil and wash
Dimensions8 × 10 1/2 in. (20.3 × 26.7 cm.) mat: 22 × 16 in. (55.9 × 40.6 cm.)
MarkingsVerso another version of the subject on the recto
Credit LineThe Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens. Gilbert Davis Collection
Label TextFuseli enjoyed flaunting his classical learning. Here, he illustrates the obscure Greek myth of Ixion and Nephele. Out of pity, Zeus invited the accursed Ixion, king of the Lapiths, to dine with the gods on Olympus. While there, Ixion lusted after Zeus’s wife, Hera. Learning of this insult, Zeus tricked Ixion into coupling with a cloud in the shape of Hera (called Nephele, from the Greek word for cloud). The offspring of this union was Centaurus, who produced the race of centaurs.

There is a second, slightly different, version of the same subject on the drawing’s reverse.

(Eccentric Visions, 2015)
Status
Not on view
Object number59.55.546
Terms
    Johann Jacob Bodmer
    Henry Fuseli
    n.d.
    Object number: 64.7
    Venus and Cupid
    Henry Fuseli
    n.d.
    Object number: 59.55.547
    Woman with a Diadem
    Henry Fuseli
    n.d.
    Object number: 82.186.5
    Una and the Lion
    Henry Fuseli
    n.d.
    Object number: 63.52.85
    Haemon Discovering the Body of Antigone
    Henry Fuseli
    1800
    Object number: 000.98
    Hercules and the Cretan Bull
    Henry Fuseli
    n.d.
    Object number: 000.61
    Siegfried Overcoming Alberich
    Henry Fuseli
    1805 (?)
    Object number: 57.14
    The Three Witches
    Henry Fuseli
    ca. 1785
    Object number: 2014.15
    Ships and Clouds
    James Holland
    1849
    Object number: 59.55.709
    Cloud Study
    John Constable
    n.d.
    Object number: 59.55.252