Hercules Slaying the Lernaean Hydra

Hercules Slaying the Lernaean Hydra

Northern Italian School, circa 1680

Italy, 17th century

Oil on octagonal panel

Dimensions: 29.7 × 39 cm

Provenance: Sotheby’s, Paris, 26 March 2014

This dynamic Baroque composition depicts Hercules in one of his most iconic Labors: the slaying of the multi-headed Hydra of Lerna, a monstrous serpent whose heads would regenerate if severed. The hero, shown in heroic nudity and muscular tension, strikes the beast with his club amid a landscape of shadow and flame.

The octagonal panel, a format favored by collectors of cabinet pictures in Northern Italy, emphasizes the narrative’s movement and central focus. The vigorous brushwork and chiaroscuro effects are characteristic of late 17th-century Lombard or Bolognese painters, whose work was influenced by Guercino and the Carracci.

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