First of all, I want to apologize for being so inactive here for such a long time. Partially, this is due to the recent problems of accessing the forum. And it is not only the login, often even loading the pages does not work.
But the technical problems of the forum don’t explain that I have been also quite lazy at my own workbench – I have not finished a single project in 2023! Nothing, zero, niente. That’s shocking, and it is time to change that. So here comes my first project for 2024.
Let’s call it “Damsel in Distress”: A princess, chained to a rock, with a terrible monster in the waters below her (not shown)…
…You probably have already recognized what I have in mind here: It is the myth of Perseus & Andromeda that I want to picture in this vignette. The figure to be used as Andromeda will also easily be recognized, it is of course from the Life on the Acropolis set by Atlantic. One of my favorite sets of all time, because of its many uses.
European art history is full of Perseus and Andromeda, in particular the latter one. For instance, last summer during my trip to Copenhagen I encountered this one made from coral at Rosenborg Castle (note the monster at her feet, ain’t it cute?)
… and a few meters across the street, at the Danish National Gallery, another one in bronze
And of course, the myth is also tremendously popular among painters, see for instance these examples by Titian (c. 1555):
Wallace Collection London / Public Domain
or Rubens (c. 1620):
Gemäldegalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin / Jörg P. Anders
All in all, from the Renaissance onward there is a strong preference for showing Andromeda in the nude, while Perseus is depicted in full dress and armor most of the times. This differs quite strongly from the conventions in Antiquity, when it was the other way round in most artworks. See e.g. this wall painting from Pompeii (Casa dei Dioscuri)
Museo Nazionale Napoli / Public Domain
or this Corinthian vase, 6th cent. BC:
Antikensammlung, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin / user BishkekRocks
I love the head of Medusa (?) with its handy carrying handles!