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Death of Hercules

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Death of Hercules

Artist Hans Sebald Beham (German, 1500-1550)
Date1548
DimensionsH: 2 1/16 in. (5.2 cm); W: 3 1/16 in. (7.8 cm)
Mediumengraving
ClassificationPrints
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number
1923.3198
Not on View
Label TextAfter putting on a tunic that his wife, Deianeira, had treated with the Hydra-contaminated blood of the centaur, Nessus, Hercules’ flesh began to burn. The more he tried to stop the pain the worse it became. Itn desperation, he instructed a friend to build a funeral pyre on which he placed himself. Upon the demi-god’s death, that part of him that was divine was welcomed to Olympus where he Afassumed his place among the gods as the son of Zeus.Exhibition HistoryToledo Museum of Art, Storytelling in Miniature, October 7, 2011-March 4, 2012.
Hercules Killing Nessus
Hans Sebald Beham
1542
Hercules Killing Nessus
Hans Sebald Beham
1542
Hercules Fighting the Trojans
Hans Sebald Beham
1545
Panel with a Mascaron
Hans Sebald Beham
1543
St. Andrew and St. Thomas
Hans Sebald Beham
1520
Wedding Dancers
Hans Sebald Beham
1546
Peasants Dancing
Hans Sebald Beham
1537
The Prodigal Son with the Swine
Hans Sebald Beham
about 1540
The Guard Near the Powder Casks
Hans Sebald Beham
early 16th-mid 16th Century

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