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Hercules and Omphale
Hercules and Omphale
Image © Worcester Art Museum, all rights reserved.

Hercules and Omphale

Artist (Flemish, about 1570–1629)
Artist (Flemish, 1546–1611)
Dateabout 1600
Mediumengraving on cream laid paper
Dimensions42.9 x 31.3 cm (image), 43.8 x 31.9 cm (sheet)
ClassificationsPrints
Credit LineSarah C. Garver Fund
Object number2000.73
Label TextGillis—whose formal name was the Latinized Aegidius— Sadeler was most prominent in his extended family of printmakers. He trained in Antwerp and Italy, and worked in family shops before moving to Prague in 1597. He lived with Spranger, and won an appointment in the imperial workshops. He became a leading figure in the final flourish of Northern Mannerism. As penance for a violent crime, Hercules had to serve as slave for a year to Omphale, queen of Lydia. She made him do women’s work, and wear their clothes while she wore his lion skin mantle.ProvenancePia Gallo, New York, NY
On View
Not on view
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