
Getty Museum
Danaë and the Shower of Gold
Creator
Orazio GentileschiItalian Artist · 1563–1639
All works by this person →Orazio Gentileschi apparently came to painting only in his early twenties, and by the late 1570s or early 1580s he was painting figures in fresco in several Roman churches. During the early 1600s, simplicity of composition, clear, precise contours, and a rich blend of bright, cool, and warm colors characterized his art. By late 1622 Gentileschi had moved to Genoa, where he worked for the duke of S
More on Getty ULAN- Date
- 1621–1623
- Medium
- Oil on canvas
- Culture
- Italian
- Department
- Paintings
- Institution
- Getty Museum
This painting is part of a series of works executed by Gentileschi in 1622 for Giovanni Antonio Sauli’s Genoese Palazzo which includes the Getty’s *[Lot and His Daughters](http://www.getty.edu/art/collection/objects/108894/)* and a painting now in a private collection, *The Penitent Magdalene*. The subject is based on a passage in Ovid’s *Metamorphoses*, in which King Acrisius of Argos imprisoned his beautiful daughter in order to avoid the Oracle’s prophesy that she would give birth to a son who would kill him. In the story, Jupiter takes the form of a shower of gold and impregnates Danaë, who then gives birth to Perseus. This subject was often exploited by artists as an opportunity to depict an erotic female nude. Here, Cupid pulls back the luxuriant dark green curtain to allow the god to enter the bedchamber, and the viewer too is invited to witness the moment of seduction. A transparent veil is draped across Danaë, though rather than covering her modesty, the fabric creates a tantalizing and sensual focal point on her body. The picture is a meticulous study of light, surface effects and color; the artist skillfully renders the sheen of the fabrics, ranging from the gold bedcover to the cool white linen sheet and deep crimson mattress.
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