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1 of 253523 objects
Deucalion and Pyrrha c.1679-80
Pen and ink with grey wash | 19.8 x 26.6 cm (sheet of paper) | RCIN 906198

Raymond de la Fage (1656-84)
Deucalion and Pyrrha c.1679-80
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A pen and ink drawing of Deucalion and Pyrrha throwing rocks as instructed by the oracle of Themis (Metamorphoses, I, 395). Inscribed along the top (not in the artist's hand) 'Deucalion...' [the rest trimmed]. The whole is framed by black chalk lines. The drawing is mounted in a George III wash line border.
This is one of forty drawings illustrating Ovid's Metamorphoses by La Fage in the Royal Collection. Anthony Blunt has suggested that these were made while the artist was in Rome in 1679-80 and were perhaps made for a planned Italian translation of the Metamorphoses which was never published. The edition on which La Fage based his drawings is unidentified, but Blunt has pointed to the French translations of Renouard (1617) and Du Ryer (1667) as possible sources.
The drawings were probably acquired by George III and were certainly in the Royal Collection by the early nineteenth century, when they were listed in an inventory of the drawings at Buckingham House ('Inventory A').
Provenance
Listed in George III's 'Inventory A,' c.1800, p.128 ('Mr: Le Fage.'): '47. Forty seven, forty of which are designs taken from the Metmorphosis of Ovid.'
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Medium and techniques
Pen and ink with grey wash
Measurements
19.8 x 26.6 cm (sheet of paper)
Object type(s)
Other number(s)
BP D (Inv A) 1810 : A Catalogue of the Drawings and Prints as they are Arranged in the Book Cases [at Buckingham House] ('Inventory A'), c.1810 – BP D (Inv A) 1810 p. 128RL 6198