Selections from the Nasher Museum of Art
Europa and the Bull
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Europa and the Bull,
ca. 520-510 B.C.E.,
Attic, Black-figure neck-amphora
17 inches tall x 9 inches
in diameter.
Anonymous gift, collection of the Nasher
Museum of Art |
Europa was the daughter of King Agenor
of Tyre in Phoenicia. According to the ancient Greek myth,
she was playing with her handmaidens on the beach one day
when Zeus, who was enamored of her, appeared in the guise
of a bull and kneeled before her. Pleased by the apparent
gentleness of the creature, she climbed on its back. As he
carried her off, she steadied herself by holding on to one
of his horns, as she does here. He swam with her to Crete
and seduced her. Europa had three sons by Zeus, including
the future King Minos.
This vase, found at Vulci in Etruria (Italy) more than 200
years ago, has a distinguished provenance, having been in
the collections of Lucien Bonaparte and the Duke of Buckingham.
It is part of an important, recent gift to the Nasher Museum
of almost 200 ancient Greek works of art ranging from the
Cycladic (third millennium B.C.E.) to the Classical period
(third century B.C.E.).
www.nasher.duke.edu
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