Artwork Page for Bacchus and Ariadne

Details / Information for Bacchus and Ariadne

Bacchus and Ariadne

1808–11
(British, 1755–1834)

after Titian

(Italian, c. 1488–1576)
Measurements
Unframed: 40.5 x 46 cm (15 15/16 x 18 1/8 in.)
Public Domain
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Did You Know?

Henry Bone was known for his enamel paintings created through a laborious process of fusing painted glass to copper and firing at controlled temperatures.

Description

Henry Bone devoted three years to creating this work, a tremendous technical achievement and the largest enamel on copper that had ever been made. The painstaking process required each application of color to be fired at a different temperature in the kiln. The enamel exactly reproduces Titian’s Bacchus and Ariadne (now in the National Gallery, London), an early sixteenth-century Italian masterpiece that had recently come into an English collection. The elaborate carved and gilded wood frame was specially designed for the work, an indication of the cultural value placed on great enamel reproductions of famous paintings.

Bone was unable to show his masterwork at the annual Royal Academy exhibition in 1811 because the Prince of Wales had asked to see it. When the prince decided not to purchase it, Bone issued more than 4,000 tickets for visitors to view the work in his studio.
A horizontally oriented enamel painting is crowded with people with light skin tones, at the center of which Bacchus leaps from a chariot pulled by cheetahs. Wearing a billowing red cloak, he jumps toward Ariadne on a beach at our left. A group of revelers, including a satyr entwined with snakes, follows on our right. In the background, a coastal landscape unfolds under a starry sky, while lush trees frame the right edge.

Bacchus and Ariadne

1808–11

Henry Bone, Titian

(British, 1755–1834), (Italian, c. 1488–1576)
England, 19th century

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