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Jupiter, Neptune and Pluto (c. 1597) is a painting by Italian Baroque master Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio. It is located in the Villa Aurora, the former hunting lodge of the erstwhile Villa Ludovisi, Rome. It is unusually painted in oils on plaster and hence it is not a fresco, although it is sometimes (incorrectly) referred to as such.
Jupiter, Neptune and Pluto: Rome, Casino di Villa Boncompagni Ludovisi: 300 × 180 cm Ceiling fresco in oil c. 1597: Fortune Teller: Paris, Musée du Louvre: 99 × 131 cm Oil on canvas: c. 1598: Saint Catherine of Alexandria: Madrid, Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum: 173 × 133 cm Oil on canvas: c. 1598: Sacrifice of Isaac: Princeton, Barbara Piasecka ...
Jupiter and Thetis is an 1811 painting by the French neoclassical painter Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, in the Musée Granet, Aix-en-Provence, France.Painted when the artist was not yet 31, the work severely and pointedly contrasts the grandeur and might of a cloud-borne Olympian male deity against that of a diminutive and half nude nymph.
Paintings of Jupiter and Antiope (4 P) Pages in category "Paintings of Jupiter (mythology)" The following 17 pages are in this category, out of 17 total.
Diana and Callisto is a painting completed between 1556 and 1559 by the Italian late Renaissance artist Titian.It portrays the moment in which the goddess Diana discovers that her maid Callisto has become pregnant by Jupiter. [1]
The Pardo Venus, Louvre, 196 x 385 cm. The Pardo Venus is a painting by the Venetian artist Titian, completed in 1551 and now in the Louvre Museum.It is also known as Jupiter and Antiope, since it seems to show the story of Jupiter and Antiope from Book VI of the Metamorphoses (lines 110-111).
Jupiter and Antiope (French: Jupiter et Antiope) is an oil painting by the French artist Antoine Watteau. It is also known as the Satyr and the Sleeping Nymph and was probably painted between 1714 and 1719. Intended to be placed over a doorway, today it hangs in the Musée du Louvre in Paris.
Jupiter and Io by Correggio, one of the few paintings to leave the Orleans Collection before the French Revolution.(Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna)The Orleans Collection was a very important collection of over 500 paintings formed by Philippe II, Duke of Orléans, mostly acquired between about 1700 and his death in 1723. [1]