Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Achilles and the Daughters of Lycomedes
View through The Met
Pen and brown ink highlighted with white over black chalk on brownish paper
Rights: Public Domain
Drawings and Prints, Metropolitan Museum of Art New York NY, Rogers Fund 1964
Title: Achilles and the Daughters of Lycomedes
Description:
Pen and brown ink highlighted with white over black chalk on brownish paper.
Related Results
Achilles Among the Daughters of Lycomedes
Achilles Among the Daughters of Lycomedes
This Brussels tapestry depicts Achilles Among the Daughters of Lycomedes. The scene shows Ulysses dressed as a street vendor selling jewelry and other wares to Lycomedes' daughters...
The Sacrifice of Polyxena
The Sacrifice of Polyxena
Polyxena, with whom Achilles fell in love, was the younger daughter of Priam and Hecuba, the king and queen of Troy. She was partly responsible for Achilles’ death, having promised...
Hydria (water jar): The Ransom of Hector
Hydria (water jar): The Ransom of Hector
Red-figure hydria (kalpis). The vessel is intact with restorations on one side of the mouth and one side handle. In the figural panel is restricted to the shoulder and depicts the ...
Lot and His Daughters
Lot and His Daughters
This incestuous biblical episode is to be found in Genesis. It narrates how Lot and his daughters left the city of Zoar, where they had lived after their departure from Sodom, and ...
François-Claudins Compte-Calix and E. Prevál. Woman's day dress by Virginie Vasseur and two girl's cloaks by Pauline Royer. Les Modes Parisiennes, c.1860. A mother and two daughters feeding crackers to a parrot. The mother in a grey dress with large crino
François-Claudins Compte-Calix and E. Prevál. Woman's day dress by Virginie Vasseur and two girl's cloaks by Pauline Royer. Les Modes Parisiennes, c.1860. A mother and two daughters feeding crackers to a parrot. The mother in a grey dress with large crino
François-Claudins Compte-Calix and E. Prevál. Woman's day dress by Virginie Vasseur and two girl's cloaks by Pauline Royer. Les Modes Parisiennes, c.1860. A mother and two daughter...


