The Fall of the Giants
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Image: IIIF / Art Institute of Chicago · Public Domain

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baroque

The Fall of the Giants

Salvator Rosa Italian, 1615-1673

Date

1663

Medium

Etching with drypoint in black on ivory laid paper

Dimensions

72.8 × 47.4 cm (28 11/16 × 18 11/16 in.)

Origin

Italy

Classification

etching

About This Work

Just as the Giants—Gaia’s offspring—attempt to storm the throne of the Olympian gods, Jupiter brings them crashing down with a thunderbolt. He can be seen at the top in the clouds. Salvator Rosa executed this colossal composition at the pinnacle of his etching career, and dedicated it to the Florentine poet Horatio Quaranta. Rosa’s pessimistic admonition appears at the bottom of the sheet: “They are raised up high that they may be hurled down in more terrible ruin.”
Multitalented with boundless energy, Rosa was also a poet, actor, musician, and painter. He made this print to promote his ideas for a painting of the same subject in hopes that a patron would sponsor its execution.

Credit Line

Elizabeth Hammond Stickney Collection

Tags

etchingpaper (fiber product)printprints and drawing
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