Landscape with Ascanius shooting the Stag of Sylvia

On display

The painter, draftsman and printmaker Claude Gellée (c.1604/5–1682) was born in the duchy of Lorraine and is better known as Claude Lorrain or simply Claude. This poetic landscape is his last painting. The subject is derived from Virgil’s Aeneid which describes Ascanius, the son of the Trojan hero Aeneas, hunting in the countryside of Latium with his companions. Unknowingly he is the instrument of the Fury Allecto who has been sent by the goddess Juno to provoke war. Allecto alerts the hunting dogs to the presence of the regal stag that has come to take refreshment in the cool river. The stag is the tame pet of Silvia, the daughter of Tyrrheus, ranger to the king of the Latins. Ascanius mortally wounds the stag, setting in motion a train of events that lead to war.

The monstrous Fury is not shown, but the wind bending the trees on the left and the impending storm seen in the scudding clouds evoke his malign intervention. Claude depicts the last moment between peace and war, as the arc of the arrow cuts through the air. The harmoniously composed landscape, unfolding into the distant mountains, is based on Claude’s intense study of nature that he made in the Roman Campagna earlier in his career.

The Landscape with Ascanius was painted for Prince Lorenzo Onofrio Colonna, an important collector who was one of Claude’s great patrons. His family claimed descent from Aeneas, and the name Colonna (‘column’) is conjured up by the elegant Corinthian columns on the left.

Details

  • Title

    Landscape with Ascanius shooting the Stag of Sylvia

  • Artist/maker

    Claude Lorrain (c. 1604 or 1605 - 1682)
  • Associated place

    Europe (place of creation)
  • Date

    1681 - 1682
  • Material and technique

    oil on canvas

  • Object type

  • Dimensions

    120 x 150 cm (height x width)
  • No. of items

    1

  • Credit line

    Presented by Mrs W. F. R. Weldon, 1926.

  • Museum location

    Second floor | Gallery 46 | Baroque Art
  • Museum department

    Western Art

  • Accession no.

    WA1926.1

  • Our online collection is being continually updated. Find out more

    Know more about this object? Spotted an error? Contact us

Further reading

Woodward, John, Treasures in Oxford (The British Council, 1951), illus. p. 28

Roethlisberger, Marcel, Claude Lorrain: The Paintings, 2 (London, 1961), ---, no. 222, illus. ---

Piper, David, and Christopher White, Treasures of the Ashmolean Museum: An Illustrated Souvenir of the Collections, revised edn (Oxford: Ashmolean Museum, 1995), no. 75 on p. 75, illus. p. 75 fig. 75

Whiteley, Jon, Ashmolean Museum, Catalogue of the Collection of Drawings, VII, French School, 2 (Oxford, University Press, 2000), under no 250

Whistler, Catherine, Baroque and Later Paintings in the Ashmolean Museum (London: Modern Art Press, 2016), no. 137, pp. 410-419

Reference URL

?
q-seffron-icon q-white-icon pluse-seffron-icon pluse-white-icon minus-seffron-icon minus-white-icon close-seffron-icon close-white-icon close-black-icon prv-gry-arrow prv-arrow print-seffron-icon print-black-icon next-arrow next-gry-arrow next-white-arrow up-arrow-black up-arrow black-up-arrow black-down-arrow white-up-arrow white-down-arrow hr-list-gry-icon hr-list-white-icon vr-list-gry-icon vr-list-white-icon eye-icon zoomin-icon zoomout-icon fullview-icon contact-black-icon contact-seffron-icon basket-seffron-icon basket-black-icon share-black-icon share-seffron-icon go-arrow search-white-icon