The Judgment of Midas

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The Judgment of Midas

Creator

Hermann Weyer

German Artist · 1596–1621

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Little is known of Hermann Weyer's life and artistic development except that his father was a painter in Coburg and his brother also worked there as a portrait painter. Weyer probably specialized as a draftsman; only his drawings, which are dated between 1607 and 1621, exist today. His highly finished style demonstrates that he intended them as independent works. Nothing is known about his trainin

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Date
1616
Medium
Pen and black ink, black, ochre, reddish and gray washes, with white gouache heightening
Culture
German
Department
Drawings
Institution
Getty Museum

Granted anything he could wish for, King Midas desired that everything he touched be turned to gold. He soon realized his mistake, however, when even the food that he handled became inedible. Here the bearded god Dionysus, crowned with a wreath of vine leaves, allows the penitent Midas, who stands on the right, to wash away his powers in the River Pactolus. A satyr with his pipes crouches at the god's feet, while nymphs cluster around. Hermann Weyer copied the composition of another artist's painting for this drawing, which Weyer made as an independent work. He used different types of strokes to build up the scene, from simple lines with sparse hatching on the figures to a complex layering of ink, wash, and heightening on the foliage at the back. Sweeps of wash give form and volume to the bodies of the nymphs.

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