Artwork Page for The Labors of Hercules: Hercules Receiving the Garment Steeped in Nessus' Blood

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The Labors of Hercules: Hercules Receiving the Garment Steeped in Nessus' Blood

1542
(German, 1500–1550)
Culture
Germany
Medium
engraving
Catalogue raisonné
Pauli 108
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

Perceiving the princess Iole as a rival, Hercules’s wife Deianeira soaks a shirt in the blood of the centaur Nessus and sends it to her husband. Deianeira believes the blood is a love potion that will secure Hercules’s undying affection, but it is actually poisonous. Here, a servant named Lichas delivers the toxic shirt. Beham was one of several German printmakers referred to today as the “Little Masters.” They established their artistic prowess by engraving remarkably small prints, appealing to collectors fascinated with miniature objects and curiosities.
A horizontally oriented print in black ink on beige paper depicts Hercules, a muscular man with a lion skin and staff, receiving a robe from Lichas. Behind them, small figures stand near a round, domed building and columned architecture. Hatches and stippling shade the scene. In the upper right corner, Latin text reads "DEIANIRA NESSI VESTEM PER LICHAM SERVVM HERCVLI MITTIT," above the initials "ISB."

The Labors of Hercules: Hercules Receiving the Garment Steeped in Nessus' Blood

1542

Hans Sebald Beham

(German, 1500–1550)
Germany

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