The Rape of Europa is a painting by the Venetian artist Titian, painted c. 1560–1562. It is in the permanent collection of the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, in Boston. The oil-on-canvas painting measures 178 by 205 centimetres (70 in × 81 in).[1]
Subject
The title of the painting refers to the mythological story of the abduction of Europa by Zeus (Jupiter to the Romans).[1] In the myth, the god assumed the form of a bull and enticed Europa to climb onto his back. Once there, the bull rode into the sea and carried her to Crete, where he revealed his real identity. Europa became the first Queen of Crete, and had three children with Zeus. When Zeus finally departed Crete, he gifted her three parting gifts, a necklace, a javelin, and a bronze guard.
Titian is unequivocal about the fact that this is a scene of rape (abduction): Europa is sprawled helplessly on her back, her clothes in disarray.[2] Furthermore, the position of legs indicates that she is kicking and fighting and attempting to free herself from Zeus. The painting depicts Europa on the back of the bull, just off the shore of her homeland. Her attendants in the background are wearing the same pink garment that Europa has in her hands.
Although the source of Titian's inspiration is thought to have been based on the scene from Book II in Ovid's Metamorphoses, a more direct influence might be a description of a painting of the rape of Europa found in Achilles Tatius's novel, Leucippe and Clitophon. Achilles Tatius's novel was translated into Italian and printed in 1546 in Venice, only a few years before Titian was thought to have painted The Rape of Europa.[3] Achilles Tatius's description of the dolphins, Europa's scarf, a Cupid, Europa's covering, and "her position on the back of the bull—not with a leg on each side but with her feet on the bull's right side and her left hand on his horn" is echoed in Titian's portrayal of the same scene.[4] Ovid's translation, notes the color of the bull and the position of her body, on the bull. "His color is like snow[5] and "Muscles bulge around his neck". This is similar to the physical details Titian shows.
For most of the 18th century it was in the Orleans Collection in Paris.[7] The painting was included in the 1857 Manchester Art Treasures exhibition.[8] It was purchased by Bernard Berenson on behalf of art collector Isabella Stewart Gardner in 1896.[9] It was not stolen during the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum theft in 1990, despite being the most expensive painting in Boston at the time.[10] From August 12, 2021, to January 2, 2022, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum displayed all six Titian poesie in an exhibit titled Titian: Women, Myth & Power.[11] It was the first time since the 16th century that the six paintings were physically united.[12]
Scholarly interpretation
Although the act of sexual violence is not depicted in the painting, it is implied through Europa's open-legged posture and her expression of fear as she is dragged off by Zeus.[13] Her danger is also implied by her waving a red silk scarf and by the sea monster in the foreground of the painting.[14] In other parts of the painting, two putti in the sky chase after Europa, and one rides on a dolphin in the sea.[14]
Yael Even has theorized that Titian could have created this painting not due to any particular attachment to the subject, but in order to assert his abilities as a painter.[15]
Copy by Rubens
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^Brigstocke, Hugh. Italian and Spanish Paintings in the National Gallery of Scotland, p. 183, 2nd ed., 1993, National Galleries of Scotland, ISBN0-903598-22-1
^FitzRoy, Charles. The Rape of Europa: The Intriguing History of Titian's Masterpiece, London: Bloomsbury, 2015, ISBN9781408192092
^Hamilton, James (2015). A Strange Business. New York, NY: Pegasus Books. p. 325. ISBN978-1-60598-870-2.
^Kurkjian, Stephen (2015). Master Thieves: The Boston Gangsters Who Pulled Off the World's Greatest Art Heist (2016 ed.). New York: PublicAffairs. p. 53. ISBN978-1-61039-632-5.