The Sons of Niobe Being Slain by Apollo and Diana

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The Sons of Niobe Being Slain by Apollo and Diana

Creator

Jan de Bisschop

Dutch Artist · 1628–1671

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Despite his amateur status, Jan de Bisschop was widely influential in art and art publishing. A lawyer by profession, he set up practice in The Hague around 1652 and later founded a drawing academy there. He mingled with an elite circle of intellectuals that included his friend and fellow amateur draftsman Constantijn Huygens the Younger. Bartholomeus Breenbergh, who lived in de Bisschop's native

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Date
about 1660–1670
Medium
Brown wash over black chalk
Culture
Dutch
Department
Drawings
Institution
Getty Museum

The sons of Niobe, queen of Thebes, flee from the arrows aimed down at them from a cloud by the Greek deities Apollo and Diana. Horses trample the bodies of the dead and dying, while two other sons throw up their hands imploringly on the left. In the story from Ovid's *Metamorphoses,*Apollo and Diana killed Niobe's seven sons and seven daughters to punish her for being too arrogant. Jan de Bisschop conveyed the scene's drama through energetic motion and repetition. Using a characteristically Baroque, sweeping horizontal composition, he interwove human figures and horses into a tangled frieze that moves from left to right. An inscription on the back of the drawing shows that the artist based the scene on an antique relief. To create an almost sculptural, two-dimensional impression, de Bisschop used a strong mixture of black chalk and brown wash, creating highlights by letting the bare paper show through.

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