Sienese school of the seventeenth century

The abduction of Proserpina

Oil on canvas, cm 188 x 123

Sienese schoolof the seventeenth century

Sienese school of the seventeenth century

The abduction of Proserpina

Oil on canvas, cm 188 x 123

Depicted at the climax of the action, at the height of drama, is the scene of the Rape of Proserpina ( for the Greeks Persephone) daughter of Ceres. The protagonist of the story is Proserpina, Roman version of the Greek Persephone, daughter of the agricultural deity Ceres (Demeter in Greek). These two mythological figures since the beginning of time are closely linked to the worship of the earth, agriculture and the alternation of the seasons, and, known as the protagonists of the "Eleusinian Mysteries", are also celebrated as "the divine couple". One day, while Proserpina was gathering flowers on the shores of Lake Pergusa, near present-day Enna, the god of the underworld Pluto, known by the Greeks as Hades, He became so fond of her that he decided to kidnap the girl and take her with him to the realm of the dead. Proserpina’s harrowing cry for help reached her mother’s ears, who, in desperation for her daughter’s fate, wandered nine days and nine nights, searching for Proserpina throughout Greece and holding two burning torches. Finally, Ceres learns from Helios how his Proserpina has been dragged by Pluto to the afterlife, so enraged and in pain, she threatens to stop working on her divine functions until her daughter returns to Earth. She took refuge, then, in Eleusi, where she was welcomed with great warmth and hospitality. Meanwhile, however, everything on Earth began to die and famines began to rage among desperate humans. 

This painting depicts the climax of the action, the moment of the rapture. Pluto, proud and insensitive, powerful and muscular, tries to drag Proserpina into the underworld by force. The muscles of the God are strained in the effort to support the body of the girl who, even if she is a minute, tries to escape and wriggle from the tight grip of Pluto. Behind the god you can see his cart pulled by the horse from whose mouth gush flames, flames that are also found at the foot of the group to indicate the inevitable fate of the young woman.

The mythological subject was much appreciated by the artists who over the centuries created different versions of it, obviously the most famous is the Proserpina’s rat, now housed in the Galleria Borghese del Bernini.

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