Object Image

There's something magical about this enchanting picture, in its unearthly, misty colours, deep shadows and strange beasts. The musician fixing us with an enquiring eye is Orpheus. His story comes from one of the legends told by the Roman poet Ovid in his book Metamorphoses.

Orpheus' skill was so great that all the beasts and birds came to hear him play. Even the gods themselves listened, beguiled, and the poet tells how the trees moved from the forests to hear him, and to give him shade from the sun.

Savery beguiles us with the animals he paints, taking us to an idyllic landscape where animals, usually hostile to each other, live harmoniously under the influence of Orpheus' music.

Credit: Bequeathed by S.J. Ainsley, 1874

1628
Oil on oak
53.0 x 81.5cm
NG920
Image and text © The National Gallery, London, 2024

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