Acis and Galatea
Acis and Galatea are characters from Greek mythology later associated together in Ovid's Metamorphoses. The episode tells of the love between the mortal Acis and the Nereid (sea-nymph) Galatea; when the jealous Cyclops Polyphemus kills Acis, Galatea transforms her lover into an immortal river spirit. The episode was made the subject of poems, operas, paintings, and statues in the Renaissance and after.
Mythology[]
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Galathea[1] or Galatea (Ancient Greek: Γαλάτεια; "she who is milk-white"[2]), the "glorious" and "comely" daughter of the 'Old Man of the Sea' Nereus and the Oceanid Doris, was a sea-nymph anciently attested in the work of both Homer and Hesiod, where she is described as the fairest and most beloved of the 50 Nereids.[3] She lived in the sea and aroused the love of a most improbable suitor, the Sicilian Cyclops Polyphemus.
In Ovid's Metamorphoses, Galatea appears as the beloved of Acis, the son of Faunus and the river-nymph , daughter of the River Symaethus. One day, when Galatea was lying beside the sea with her lover, Polyphemus saw them. The latter, in his jealousy, tore an enormous boulder out of the side of Mt. Etna and hurled it at the young man. Although Acis tried to flee, the huge rock crushed him beneath to death. Galatea then turned his blood into sparkling waters as it trickled from under the rock, so creating the stream on Etna that bore his name, the Sicilian River Acis. She turned her lover himself into the horned god of the stream. He retained his original features except that he was larger and his face was now a deep blue.[4][5][6]
This version of the tale now occurs nowhere earlier than in Ovid's work and might perhaps have been a fiction invented by the poet, "suggested by the manner in which the little river springs forth from under a rock".[7] But according to the Greek scholar Athenaeus, the story was first concocted by Philoxenus of Cythera as a political satire against the Sicilian tyrant Dionysius I of Syracuse, whose favourite concubine, Galatea, shared her name with the nymph.[8] Others claim that the story was invented to explain the presence of a shrine dedicated to Galatea on Mount Etna.[9]
According to a later tradition Galatea eventually yielded to Polyphemus' embraces. Their son, Galas or , became the ancestor of the Gauls.[10] The Hellenistic historian Timaeus, who was of Sicilian birth, described Galates as a son of Polyphemos and Galateia.[11]
Galatea together with Doto and Panope, escorted her sister Thetis out of the sea to her wedding with Peleus.[12] In Homer's Iliad, Galatea and her other sisters appear to Thetis when she cries out in sympathy for the grief of Achilles at the slaying of his friend Patroclus.[13]
Cultural references[]
Literary and operatic[]
During Renaissance and Baroque times the story emerged once more as a popular theme. In Spain, Luis de Góngora y Argote wrote the much-admired narrative poem, Fábula de Polifemo y Galatea, published in 1627. It is particularly noted for its depiction of landscape and for the sensual description of the love of Acis and Galatea.[14] It was written in homage to an earlier and rather shorter narrative with the same title by Luis Carillo y Sotomayor (1611)[15] The story was also given operatic treatment in the very popular zarzuela of Antoni Lliteres Carrió (1708). The atmosphere here is lighter and enlivened by the inclusion of the clowns Momo and Tisbe.
In France, Jean-Baptiste Lully devoted his opera Acis et Galatée (1686) to their love.[16] Described by him as a pastoral-heroic work, it depicts a love triangle between the three main characters - Acis, Galatea, and Poliphème. Poliphème murders Acis out of jealousy, but Acis is revived and turned into a river by Neptune. In Italy Giovanni Bononcini's one-act opera Polifemo followed in 1703.[17]
Shortly afterwards George Frideric Handel was working in that country and composed the cantata Aci, Galatea e Polifemo (1708), laying as much emphasis on the part of Polifemo as on the lovers. Written in Italian, Polifemo's deep bass solo Fra l'ombre e gl'orrori (From horrid shades) establishes his character from the start.[18] After Handel's move to England, he gave the story a new treatment in his pastoral opera Acis and Galatea with an English libretto provided by John Gay.[19] Initially composed in 1718, the work went through many revisions and was later to be given updated orchestrations by both Mozart and Mendelssohn. As a pastoral work where Polyphemus plays only a minor, though decisive part, it largely centres on the two lovers.
While staying in London, Nicola Porpora composed the opera Polifemo which features Acis and Galatea as well as the former's encounter with Polyphemus. In Austria later in the century, Joseph Haydn composed Acide e Galatea (1763).[20] Designed for an imperial wedding, it was given a happier ending centred on the transformation scene after the murder of Acis as the pair declare their undying love.[21]
Painting[]
Acis and Galatea hiding from Polyphemus by Édouard Zier (1877)
Acis by Philip Galle (1586)
Atis and Galathea by Pompeo Batoni (1761)
Acis and Galatea by Nicolas Poussin (circa 1629-1630)
Acis and Galatea by Nicolas Bertin
Acis und Galatea by Jacob van Schuppen (circa 1730)
Acis, Galatea, and Polyphemus by François Perrier (1645 and 1650)
Coastal landscape with Acis and Galatea by Claude Lorrain (1657)
Acis and Galatea by Michel Corneille
Landscape with Polyphemus by Nicolas Poussin
Paintings featuring Acis and Galatea can be grouped according to their themes. Most notably the story takes place within a pastoral landscape in which the figures are almost incidental. This is particularly so in Nicolas Poussin's Landscape with Polyphemus (1649)(Hermitage Museum) and Claude Lorrain's seaside landscape (Dresden) of 1657, in both of which the lovers play a minor part in the foreground. In an earlier painting by Poussin (National Gallery of Ireland, 1630) the couple is among several embracing figures in the foreground, shielded from view of Polyphemus, who is playing his flute higher up the slope.
In all of these Polyphemus is somewhere in the background, but many others feature Galatea alone, as in Perino del Vaga's painting of her being drawn by sea beasts over the waves while riding on a seashell.[22] Generally, though, the nymph is carried through the sea by adoring attendants in paintings generally titled The Triumph of Galatea, of which the most renowned treatment is by Raphael. In general these follow the 3rd-century description given of such a painting by Philostratus the Younger in his Imagines:[23]
The nymph sports on the peaceful sea, driving a team of four dolphins yoked together and working in harmony; and maiden-daughters of Triton, Galatea's servants, guide them, curving them in if they try to do anything mischievous or contrary to the rein. She holds over her heads against the wind a light scarf of sea-purple to provide a shade for herself and a sail for her chariot, and from it a kind of radiance falls upon her forehead and her head, though no white more charming than the bloom on her cheek; her hair is not tossed by the breeze, for it is so moist that it is proof against the wind. And lo, her right elbow stands out and her white forearm is bent back, while she rests her fingers on her delicate shoulder, and her arms are gently rounded, and her breasts project, nor yet is beauty lacking in her thigh. Her foot, with the graceful part that ends in it, is painted as on the sea and it lightly touches the water as if it were the rudder guiding her chariot. Her eyes are wonderful, for they have a kind of distant look that travels as far as the sea extends.
In those cases where the rejected lover Polyphemus appears somewhere ashore, the division between them is emphasised by their being identified with their respective elements, sea, and land. Typical examples of this were painted by Francois Perrier,[24] Giovanni Lanfranco[25] and Jean-Baptiste van Loo.
Sensual portrayals of the lovers embracing in a landscape were provided by French painters especially, as in those by Charles de La Fosse (c. 1700), Jean-François de Troy[26] and Alexandre Charles Guillemot (1827).[27] Polyphemus lurks in the background of these and in the example by De Troy his presence plainly distresses Galatea. Other French examples by Antoine Jean Gros (1833)[28] and Édouard Zier (1877) show the lovers hiding in a cave and peering anxiously out at him.
They anticipate the tragic moment when he looms menacingly over the pair, having discovered the truth they have tried to conceal. The threat is as apparent in Jean-Francois de Troy's softly outlined 18th-century vision[29] as it is in Odilon Redon's almost Surrealist painting of 1900. The brooding atmosphere in these suggests the violent action which is to follow. That had been portrayed in earlier paintings of Polyphemus casting a rock at the fleeing lovers, such as those by Annibale Carracci,[30] [31] and Carle van Loo.[32]
Sculpture[]
Acis playing the flute by Jean-Baptiste Tuby
Galatea in the Gardens of Versailles
The lovers embrace on the Medici Fountain, Paris
The lovers drawn over the sea, 17th-century German ivory carving
An Italian vase decorated with the Triumph of Galatea
Gabriël Grupello's statue at Schwetzingen Palace
Nicola Michetti's statue at the Peterhof Palace
Galatea at the head of the
, Stuttgart
Statues of Galatea, sometimes in the company of Acis, began to be made in Europe from the 17th century. There is a fanciful description of a fountain that incorporates them both in John Barclay's Latin novel Argenis, dating from 1621:
Being drawn to the top of the fountain, the water passed through many pipes in various forms, then falling into the cistern beneath, it boiled with the force of its falling and waxed green like the sea. In the midst whereof, Galatea, as in the sea, bewailed her newly dead Acis, who lay on the shore, and as if he now began to be dissolved into a river, he sent forth two streams, one at his mouth, the other at his wound.[33]
An actual statue by a pool in the public gardens of Acireale, the Sicilian town where the transformation of Acis is supposed to have taken place, is less ingenious. He lies beneath the boulder that has killed him while Galatea crouches to one side, an arm raised to heaven in supplication.[34]
French sculptors have also been responsible for some memorable statues. There are a pair by Jean-Baptiste Tuby in the Bosquet des Dômes in the Versailles gardens. Acis leans on a rock, casually playing the flute, as the half-clad Galatea comes upon him with hands lifted in surprise (1667–75). A similar gesture is displayed in the statue of her alone in the fountain to the right of the great staircase at Château de Chantilly. The lovers are portrayed together as part of the Medici Fountain in the Luxembourg Garden in Paris. Designed by Auguste Ottin in 1866, the marble group embrace inside a grotto while above them is crouched a huge Polyphemus in weathered bronze, peering down in jealousy.
Many other statues feature Galatea alone, but there is a complication. Some time after the Renaissance, the same name was given to Pygmalion's animated statue and one has to distinguish between representations of her and of the nymph Galatea. One pointer is given by the introduction of features mentioned in the description of the nymph by Philostratus that is quoted above. These include one hand raised and holding a billowing scarf; sea imagery, including shells, dolphins and tritons; and often the fact that the statue is incorporated into a fountain. In the work by Gabriel de Grupello in the castle park at Schwetzingen, the triton at Galatea's feet holds up a garland threaded with shells and pearls. The Galatea in the grounds of Tsarskoye Selo in Russia has sea pearls threaded into her hair. There is also a statue of her by Nicola Michetti that forms part of the cascade at the Peterhof Palace in St Petersburg.
The nymph reclines on a large shell carried by tritons in the 18th-century fountain at the Villa Borromeo Visconti Litta in Milan. It is on the back of a dolphin that she reclines in the statue by the 19th-century Italian sculptor Leopoldo Ansiglioni (1832–1894). There are two versions of this, one at the centre of a fish pool in the East House of the University of Greenwich's Winter Gardens,[35] and a later copy installed at Hearst Castle in California.[36] In this, one of the arms bent back to support her head is encircled by the dolphin's tail. There is also a German fountain by Karl Friedrich Moest now installed in Karlsruhe in which Galatea sits on the back of a triton. Over her head she balances the huge shell from which the water pours. Another statue was erected at the head of an impressive cascade in Stuttgart's Eugenplatz.[37] A work of Otto Rieth (1858–1911) dating from 1890, it features the nymph crowned with seaweed and surging up from the dolphin and young cupids playing at her feet.
In the applied arts, three-dimensional representations of Raphael's triumph theme were often incorporated into artifacts for aristocratic use and were painted on majolica ware.
Notes[]
- ^ Hyginus, Fabulae Preface (Latin ed. Micyllus; Scheffero; Schimdt)
- ^ Kerényi, Carl (1951). The Gods of the Greeks. London: Thames and Hudson. pp. 64–65.
- ^ Hesiod, Theogony 250; Homer, Iliad 18.45; Apollodorus, 1.2.7
- ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 13.750-68
- ^ Grimal, Pierre (1996). The Dictionary of Classical Mythology. Blackwell. p. 158. ISBN 978-0-631-20102-1.
- ^ Hard, Robin (2004). The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology. New York, NY: Taylor & Francis Group. pp. 55–56. ISBN 0-203-44633-X.
- ^ Schmitz, Leonhard (1867), "Acis", in Smith, William (ed.), Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, 1, Boston, MA, p. 13
- ^ Athenaeus, Deipnosophistae 1.6e
- ^ Scholiast on Theocritus' Idyll VI quoting the historian Duris and the poet Philoxenus of Cythera
- ^ Herbert Jennings Rose, A Handbook of Greek Mythology, Routledge, 1990, p.20
- ^ Hard, Robin (2004). The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology. New York, NY: Taylor & Francis Group. p. 56. ISBN 0-203-44633-X.
- ^ Valerius Flaccus, Argonautica 1.130 ff.
- ^ Homer, Iliad 18.39-51
- ^ Góngora, Luis de (2008). Selected Poems of Luis de Góngora. University of Chicago. p. 176ff. ISBN 9780226140629.
- ^ "Selected Poems of Luis de Góngora" (PDF). biblioteca-antologica.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-05-12. Retrieved 2013-09-02.
- ^ "Presto Classical - Lully: Acis et Galatée - DG Archiv: E4534972 (download) - Buy online". prestoclassical.co.uk.
- ^ "Martina Bovet: Dove sei, dove t'ascondi; G. B. Bononcini (Polifemo) - YouTube". youtube.com. Retrieved 2014-09-12.
- ^ "Aci, Galatea e Polifemo - Fra l'ombre e gl'orrori - YouTube". youtube.com. Retrieved 2014-09-12.
- ^ The text is on the Stanford University site and there is a complete performance on YouTube
- ^ Brief excerpts at Classical Archives
- ^ Rebecca Green, "Representing the Aristocracy", in Haydn and his world, Princeton University 1997, pp.167-8
- ^ http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-yKTcOgwlx0U/TxqpsTcifiI/AAAAAAAALN4/D5PDymRH16k/s1600/Galatea.jpg
- ^ 2.18, translation by Arthur Fairbanks, (Loeb 1931)
- ^ http://www.wga.hu/art/p/perrier/acisgala.jpg
- ^ "Giovanni Lanfranco Galatea and Polyphemus Painting Reproduction On Artclon For Sale - Buy Art Reproductions Galatea and Polyphemus". artclon.com.
- ^ Christie?s. "Jean-François de Troy (Paris 1679-1752 Rome)". christies.com.
- ^ "The Athenaeum - The Loves of Acis and Galatea (Alexandre Charles Guillemot - )". the-athenaeum.org.
- ^ ALL. "Acis And Galatea by AntoineJean Gros, 1833. BonzaSheila Presents The Art Of Love Archives For February, 2006". bonzasheila.com.
- ^ "polyphemus and Acis and Galatea.gif - tribe.net". Archived from the original on 2014-02-02. Retrieved 2014-09-12.
- ^ "Web Gallery of Art has been moved to a new address!".
- ^ "Wave/image/joconde/0640/m507704_02-014751_p". culture.gouv.fr. Retrieved 2014-09-12.
- ^ "Polyphemus attacking Acis and Galatea (after) Loo, Carle van | Oil Painting Reproduction | 1st-Art-Gallery.com". 1st-art-gallery.com. Retrieved 2014-09-12.
- ^ Barkley, John (2004). Argenis (Mark Riley and Dorothy Pritchard Huber's translation). Assen NL. p. 155. ISBN 9780866983167.
- ^ http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-kThEbQGMmBk/TzGUDIvSurI/AAAAAAABC0g/I-28O8ANL4I/s1600/Marble+statue+in+the+garden+publics+of+Acireale,+Sicily+-+Tutt%27Art@.jpg%7Ctitle=-kThEbQGMmBk/TzGUDIvSurI/AAAAAAABC0g/I-28O8ANL4I/s1600/Marble+statue+in+the+garden+publics+of+Acireale,+Sicily+-+Tutt%27Art@[permanent dead link]
- ^ "Galatea | Flickr - Photo Sharing!". flickr.com. 10 January 2013. Retrieved 2014-09-12.
- ^ "Hearst Castle Statue - Galatea on a Dolphin by Leopoldo Ansiglioni photo - Rich Gardner photos at pbase.com". pbase.com. Retrieved 2014-09-12.
- ^ "Photo-1606191.JPG (768x1024 pixels)".
References[]
- Apollodorus, The Library with an English Translation by Sir James George Frazer, F.B.A., F.R.S. in 2 Volumes, Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1921. ISBN 0-674-99135-4. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library. Greek text available from the same website.
- Gaius Julius Hyginus, Fabulae from The Myths of Hyginus translated and edited by Mary Grant. University of Kansas Publications in Humanistic Studies. Online version at the Topos Text Project.
- Grimal, Pierre (1986). The Dictionary of Classical Mythology. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-20102-5.
- Hard, Robin, The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology: Based on H.J. Rose's "Handbook of Greek Mythology", Psychology Press, 2004, ISBN 9780415186360. Google Books.
- Gaius Valerius Flaccus, Argonautica translated by Mozley, J H. Loeb Classical Library Volume 286. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1928. Online version at theio.com.
- Gaius Valerius Flaccus, Argonauticon. Otto Kramer. Leipzig. Teubner. 1913. Latin text available at the Perseus Digital Library.
- Hesiod, Theogony from The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G. Evelyn-White, Cambridge, MA.,Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1914. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library. Greek text available from the same website.
- Homer, The Iliad with an English Translation by A.T. Murray, Ph.D. in two volumes. Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann, Ltd. 1924. ISBN 978-0674995796. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
- Homer, Homeri Opera in five volumes. Oxford, Oxford University Press. 1920. ISBN 978-0198145318. Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library.
- Kerényi, Carl, The Gods of the Greeks, Thames and Hudson, London, 1951.
- Publius Ovidius Naso, Metamorphoses translated by Brookes More (1859-1942). Boston, Cornhill Publishing Co. 1922. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
- Publius Ovidius Naso, Metamorphoses. Hugo Magnus. Gotha (Germany). Friedr. Andr. Perthes. 1892. Latin text available at the Perseus Digital Library.
- Smith, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology: Acis
Further reading[]
- Aken, Dr. A.R.A. van. (1961). Elseviers Mythologische Encyclopedie. Amsterdam: Elsevier.
- Bartelink, Dr. G.J.M. (1988). Prisma van de mythologie. Utrecht: Het Spectrum.
- Cooper, J.C., ed. (1997). Brewer's Book of Myth and Legend. Oxford: Helicon Publishing Ltd.
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Smith, William, ed. (1870). "Acis". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology.
- Metamorphoses into bodies of water in Greek mythology
- Sicilian characters in Greek mythology
- Nereids
- Greek sea gods
- Metamorphoses
- Mythological lovers
- Metamorphoses characters