Advanced Search
Venus Giving Arms to Aeneas
Luca Giordano (Italian (Neapolitan), 1634–1705)
1680–82
Medium/Technique
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
227.3 x 199.4 cm (89 1/2 x 78 1/2 in.)
Credit Line
Charles Potter Kling Fund and Henry H. and Zoe Oliver Sherman Fund
Accession Number1984.409
CollectionsEurope
ClassificationsPaintings
Giordano, a child prodigy and prolific artist, was widely acclaimed for his quick production of animated scenes. Here the goddess Venus has surprised her son, Aeneas, with armor and arms to assist him in the Trojan War. The highly polished and decorative surfaces of the helmet, brass corselet, and leg greaves are richly accented with dark and light, while the tree extends below as if wearing the armor.
ProvenanceBy 1888, Grand Duke Friedrich-Augustus II (b. 1852 - d. 1931), Oldenburg, Germany [see note 1]; June 25, 1924, Oldenburg sale, Muller, Amsterdam, lot 108, sold for 825 gulden. July 15, 1955, anonymous sale, Christie's, London, lot 109, to Duits, London, for £472.10. By 1964, Walter P. Chrysler, Jr. (b. 1909 - d. 1988), New York. Private collection, New York [see note 2]. By 1983, French and Co., New York; 1984, sold by French and Co. to the MFA. (Accession Date: September 12, 1984)
NOTES:
[1] See Wilhelm von Bode, Die Grossherzogliche Gemälde-Galerie in Oldenburg (1888), p. 23. When and how the dukes of Oldenburg acquired the painting is not known. A painting -- or paintings -- matching the description of the MFA composition appeared on the London art market in the nineteenth century. For example, "Venus requesting the Armor of Aeneas" by Luca Giordano was sold at the auction of John Crewe, 2nd Baron Crewe, in London in 1806, and a painting described as "Thetis Descending into the Cave of the Cyclops, to superintend the forging of the armor of Achilles," also by Giordano, appeared at an anonymous London auction in 1835. Whether either of these is identical to the MFA composition is not known.
[2] Possibly the Pokros collection; see Oreste Ferrari and Giuseppe Scavizzi, Luca Giordano: L'opera completa (Naples: Electa, 1992), p. 299, cat. no. A288.
NOTES:
[1] See Wilhelm von Bode, Die Grossherzogliche Gemälde-Galerie in Oldenburg (1888), p. 23. When and how the dukes of Oldenburg acquired the painting is not known. A painting -- or paintings -- matching the description of the MFA composition appeared on the London art market in the nineteenth century. For example, "Venus requesting the Armor of Aeneas" by Luca Giordano was sold at the auction of John Crewe, 2nd Baron Crewe, in London in 1806, and a painting described as "Thetis Descending into the Cave of the Cyclops, to superintend the forging of the armor of Achilles," also by Giordano, appeared at an anonymous London auction in 1835. Whether either of these is identical to the MFA composition is not known.
[2] Possibly the Pokros collection; see Oreste Ferrari and Giuseppe Scavizzi, Luca Giordano: L'opera completa (Naples: Electa, 1992), p. 299, cat. no. A288.