Artwork Page for Achilles Dragging the Body of Hector

Details / Information for Achilles Dragging the Body of Hector

Achilles Dragging the Body of Hector

1648
(Italian, 1612–1650)
Medium
etching
Catalogue raisonné
Bellini 37
State
I/IV
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

The strong diagonals and heroic male bodies in this print relay an episode from the Trojan War in which the Greek warrior Achilles takes vengeance on the Trojan prince Hector for murdering his friend Patroclus. Here, Achilles is depicted dragging Hector’s dead body behind a chariot outside the gates of Troy. Primarily a draftsman and printmaker, Pietro Testa was known for the remarkable effects of space, texture, and light he was able to achieve by immersing the copper plate in an acid bath in several stages. This method allowed for deeper etched lines, in such areas as the dark shadows that frame the two central figures, while retaining sketchier details in the background.
A horizontally oriented print in black ink on cream paper depicts two nude men with light skin tones. The first, Achilles, holds the reins of a chariot with one hand, resting the other on his sheathed sword. He looks down at Hector's body, legs tied by which the chariot drags him, arms up. People gather just outside and among the walls of a city in the background. A winged woman holds a wreath over the helmet-wearing Achilles.

Achilles Dragging the Body of Hector

1648

Pietro Testa

(Italian, 1612–1650)
Italy, 17th century

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