Andrea Schiavone, 'Jupiter seducing Callisto', about 1550
Two Mythological Scenes
These are two of three paintings made to decorate the front and sides of a wooden chest, known in Italian as a cassone. They depict the story of the nymph Callisto, as told in Ovid’s Metamorphoses. Such chests were important pieces of furniture used for storing clothes and household linen. A bride would be given one by her parents as a wedding gift and she would take it with her to her marital home.
Jupiter seducing Callisto is the first episode depicted. While Callisto was resting in a leafy glade, Jupiter appeared disguised as Diana, goddess of chastity. He seduced Callisto and made her pregnant. In the long painting for the front of the cassone (Musée de Picardie, Amiens) Callisto’s fellow nymphs reveal her pregnancy to Diana. When Diana discovered that Callisto was pregnant, she turned her into a bear. In the third episode of the story the bear is shot dead by Callisto’s son Arcas, who does not realise that it is his mother.
These are two of three paintings made to decorate the front and sides of a wooden chest, known in Italian as a cassone. They depict the story of the nymph Callisto, as told in Ovid’s Metamorphoses.
The two small paintings, each about 18 cm square, decorated the ends of the chest. They are painted on canvas and would probably have been glued to a thin wooden panel. Cassoni were important pieces of furniture used for storing clothes and household linen. A bride’s parents would give her one as a wedding gift and she would take it with her to her marital home. These chests were frequently painted with the coats of arms of the two families joined by the marriage, or decorated with religious scenes or cautionary legends about love. They were often placed at the foot of the couple’s bed.
Jupiter seducing Callisto is the first episode of the story. The nymph Callisto was a favourite of Diana, the goddess of hunting and of chastity. While Callisto was resting in a leafy glade, Jupiter appeared disguised as Diana. He seduced Callisto and made her pregnant. In the long painting for the front of the chest (Musée de Picardie, Amiens) Callisto’s fellow nymphs reveal her pregnancy to a furious Diana. When Diana discovered that Callisto was pregnant, she turned her into a bear. In the third episode of the story, Arcas Hunting, Arcas goes out into the woods and shoots the bear dead, not realising that it is his mother.
Schiavone was especially known for his lively handling of paint. Here he has used gold for light in the clouds and on the foliage as well as on the drapery. The quality of Schiavone’s paintings must have been greatly admired – these pictures had already been detached from their cassone by 1779 and were displayed in a Venetian art collection.