The Abduction of Ganymede by Rembrandt van Rijn - 1635 - 177 x 129 cm Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden The Abduction of Ganymede by Rembrandt van Rijn - 1635 - 177 x 129 cm Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden

The Abduction of Ganymede

oil on canvas • 177 x 129 cm
  • Rembrandt van Rijn - July 15, 1606 - October 4, 1669 Rembrandt van Rijn 1635

Have you ever seen such an unhappy child?

Well, he is being abducted, so there is no surprise that he is crying. This Rembrandt painting presents quite a creepy story from Ancient Greek and Roman mythology.

In classical poetry Ganymede is described as a beautiful youth, who was much loved by the gods as a cupbearer. Jupiter himself had fallen in love with the boy, and after assuming the form of an eagle had kidnapped him from the Trojan plains. The painting has been interpreted in quite different ways: humanists saw the childlike pure soul loved by God in the figure of the small child Ganymede, while the motif of urination was believed to emphasize Ganymede's second nature as the zodiac sign Aquarius, the water bearer, who called for the growth of vegetation.  Other theories concentrate on the cherries. 

We present today's painting thanks to the Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden.

P.S. Greek gods usually did what they wanted to—check here for Zeus’s Top 5 lovers and their crazy stories!  :D

P.S. Bored at home? Here are some amusing gadgets from museum shops to entertain you during quarantine <3