Silenus was the teacher and companion of Bacchus, the god of wine; he is often shown supported by satyrs because of his age and drunken condition. At the lower right two putti offer him grapes, while above them an old Bacchante carries a torch. On the left a figure playes pipes, and a young Bacchante squeezes grapes over Silenus. The painting is thought to have been executed in Rubens\u27 studio. The sky and landscape are probably by Jan Wildens, and the foliage and fruit by Frans Snijders. The design of the figures may have been executed by a member of the studio, possibly Van Dyck, and then reworked by Rubens himself.https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/saskia/3421/thumbnail.jp
Pierre Peyronnet : Drinking to the health of the audience. A study of some seventy-five plays enabl...
In the surviving corpus of Attic black- and red-figure pottery are found ninety unusual and quite ra...
In Archaic Athenian vase-painting, silens (satyrs) are often sexually aroused, but only sporadi-call...
Silenus was the teacher and companion of Bacchus, the god of wine; he is often shown supported by sa...
Silenus was the teacher and companion of Bacchus, the god of wine; he is often shown supported by sa...
Overall view; The ribald and exuberant Triumph of Silenus was exhibited at the Salons 1885 and 1897....
The sculptural fragment dates from the Classical Period of Ancient Greece. It represents Silenus, a ...
Silenus, the elderly, white-haired and wild-looking satyr, is a popular figure in South Italian vase...
A chronologically ordered and exhaustive journey in the iconography of the god of wine, Dionysus or ...
Left to right: Dionysus Sarcophagus. Car on which D is on + Ariadne recline. Drawn by 2 centaurs pla...
This paper describes and analyses two polychrome figurative panels of a Roman mosaic found in Mateli...
This painting by Titian is the counterpart of the Garden of loves which hangs in the same Museum\u...
This paper completes the commentary of a statue from the Clos de la Lombarde at Nar bonne published ...
From the 14th century onwards the European production, diffusion and consumption of wine increased d...
Dramatic actions are a very interesting field for the study of 'submerged literature', that is the c...
Pierre Peyronnet : Drinking to the health of the audience. A study of some seventy-five plays enabl...
In the surviving corpus of Attic black- and red-figure pottery are found ninety unusual and quite ra...
In Archaic Athenian vase-painting, silens (satyrs) are often sexually aroused, but only sporadi-call...
Silenus was the teacher and companion of Bacchus, the god of wine; he is often shown supported by sa...
Silenus was the teacher and companion of Bacchus, the god of wine; he is often shown supported by sa...
Overall view; The ribald and exuberant Triumph of Silenus was exhibited at the Salons 1885 and 1897....
The sculptural fragment dates from the Classical Period of Ancient Greece. It represents Silenus, a ...
Silenus, the elderly, white-haired and wild-looking satyr, is a popular figure in South Italian vase...
A chronologically ordered and exhaustive journey in the iconography of the god of wine, Dionysus or ...
Left to right: Dionysus Sarcophagus. Car on which D is on + Ariadne recline. Drawn by 2 centaurs pla...
This paper describes and analyses two polychrome figurative panels of a Roman mosaic found in Mateli...
This painting by Titian is the counterpart of the Garden of loves which hangs in the same Museum\u...
This paper completes the commentary of a statue from the Clos de la Lombarde at Nar bonne published ...
From the 14th century onwards the European production, diffusion and consumption of wine increased d...
Dramatic actions are a very interesting field for the study of 'submerged literature', that is the c...
Pierre Peyronnet : Drinking to the health of the audience. A study of some seventy-five plays enabl...
In the surviving corpus of Attic black- and red-figure pottery are found ninety unusual and quite ra...
In Archaic Athenian vase-painting, silens (satyrs) are often sexually aroused, but only sporadi-call...