The Hunt of Meleager

Nicolas Poussin · PD

The Hunt of Meleager


Details

Year
1634
Medium
oil paint
Type
painting
Dimensions
160 × 360 cm

The story

In the 1630s a Frenchman named Nicolas Poussin was living in Rome, quietly building a reputation among cardinals and collectors for pictures that read like classical literature made visible. This long frieze shows a moment from Ovid, the great hunt setting out for Calydon, where a giant boar sent by an angry Diana is ravaging the fields. The heroes ride out in procession, and you can pick out Atalanta, the one woman allowed to join, in a plain blue robe on a white horse. She is the reason the story turns tragic later. Whether Poussin's own hand made this canvas is now doubted. The Prado still hangs it under his name, but a number of scholars read it instead as a studio work or a follower's, and no one has settled the question. The picture stays close to Ovid all the same, down to the open countryside ahead of the riders, before the forest closes in.

The app reads these to you, in ten languages. Coming soon.
The Hunt of Meleager — Nicolas Poussin — MuseScope