Ziffi
🛒
ArteHouse

The Abduction of the Sabines Gm-00062801

CHF 20
Out of stockchecking live price…
Products
Giclee Matte Art Paper (24" x 36") 60 x 90cmStretched Canvas (16" x 20") 40 x 50cmStretched Canvas (24" x 36") 60 x 90cmStretched Canvas (24" x 48") 60 x 122cmStretched Canvas (28" x 28") 70 x 70cmGiclee Matte Art Paper (44" x 60") 112 x 152cmGiclee Matte Art Paper (18" x 24") 45 x 60cmGiclee Matte Art Paper (30" x 40") 75 x 100cmStretched Canvas (32" x 48") 80 x 122cmNote Cards (4.7" x 6.5") 12 x 16.5cm Pack of 4Stretched Canvas (18" x 24") 45 x 60cm
View on ArteHouse store ↗
Girolamo del Pacchia (Italian (Sienese), 1477–after 1533)

In book one of his History of Rome, Livy (59 or 64 BC – 12 or 17 AD) recounts that the city was built by soldiers and a rabble of men seeking asylum in exchange for their work as laborers in its construction. Shortly after Rome was established, its founder, Romulus, sought to bring equilibrium to the city’s population, recognizing that his new settlement was “threatened to last for only one generation, since through the absence of women there was no hope of offspring, and there was no right of intermarriage with their neighbors.” He sent envoys to many of the surrounding communities, entreating them to grant the Romans this right of intermarriage. When these local tribes refused, Romulus “disguised his resentment” and invited his nearest neighbors, including the Sabines, to his new city for a festival. The celebrations were a ruse, and the Romans drove away the Sabine men and abducted their women. The Sabine men bided their time in carefully preparing their counter attack, during which time the Romans successfully persuaded the women to join their cause, offering them legal marriage and all the privileges of free citizens of Rome, which eventually led to “reconciliation and love.” When the Sabine tribe returned to wage bloody war on the Romans, Livy reports that the women threw themselves between the warring armies and their impassioned speeches led to a truce.

The Abduction of the Sabines was a popular subject in Girolamo del Pacchia’s time as a defining episode in the legendary history of Rome. The story of the foundation of the city was of specific importance to Sienese patrons who understood themselves to be descendants of the ancient Romans, since Siena was said to have been established by Aschius and Senius, the nephews of Romulus. The subject also afforded the artist an opportunity to display his virtuosity by depicting a mass of figures, some nude, engaged in dramatic struggle.

Because of its long, horizontal format, the painting was thought at one time to have been part of a cassone (a decorated chest used for storage in domestic settings, and traditionally gifted as part of a bride’s dowry), but its relatively large size suggests that it is more likely to have functioned as a spalliera, or decorative wall panel. Spalliere would often have been placed directly above cassoni or other items of furniture, or at head or shoulder height. The downward gaze of several figures in the crowd would have been complemented by a viewing position from below, and the downward motion of the Sabine woman in the foreground would have given the impression that she is falling toward the viewer.

Delivery

uid sha:975c2b86f247ed085843e442d38e13bc15a6f38a

You may also like

The Abduction of Proserpine Gm-00071401
ArteHouse
CHF 20
out of stock
Tarquin the Elder Consulting Attus Navius Gm-00069101
ArteHouse
CHF 20
out of stock
A Roman Feast Gm-00068101
ArteHouse
CHF 20
out of stock
Marriage of a Patrician Couple Gm-00021601
ArteHouse
CHF 20
out of stock
The Lictors Bringing Brutus the Bodies of His Sons Gm-00006201
ArteHouse
CHF 20
out of stock
Battle Scene Gm-00065701
ArteHouse
CHF 20
out of stock
Horatius Cocles verdedigt de Pons Sublitius
ArteHouse
CHF 20
out of stock
Massacre of the Innocents Gm-00044801
ArteHouse
CHF 20
out of stock