Aeneas before Dido, and Venus Supplicating Jupiter thumbnail 1
Aeneas before Dido, and Venus Supplicating Jupiter thumbnail 2
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
British Galleries, Room 54

Aeneas before Dido, and Venus Supplicating Jupiter

Oil Painting
ca. 1720 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Object Type
By 1700 wall paintings were replacing tapestry as a cheaper yet more fashionable decoration for grand halls, staircases and ceilings. Noble or rich families commissioned artists, often from France, Holland and Italy, to decorate their homes with mythological, patriotic or allegorical scenes. These became a sure indicator of wealth and status, as well as demonstrating the owner's learning, allegiance and sophisticated taste. Sketches such as this would have been offered for approval to the client before work began.

People
Sir James Thornhill painted numerous decorations for private patrons as well as public commissions. Between 1715 and 1725 he undertook for James Brydges, Ist Duke of Chandos, some of the decorations at Cannons, his magnificent home near Edgware in Middlesex. The palace was pulled down and the murals destroyed around 1750 after the fraudulent speculations of the South Sea Bubble bankrupted the Duke.

Subjects Depicted
This design, depicting Aeneas before Dido with the gods of Olympus, was probably intended for the staircase at Cannons. The subject is taken from Virgil's poem the Aeneid, written in the 1st century BC. It celebrated the legendary foundation of the Roman state by the descendants of Aeneas who had escaped from the destruction of Troy.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleAeneas before Dido, and Venus Supplicating Jupiter (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
oil on canvas
Brief description
Oil painting, 'Design for staircase at Canons (probably) - Aeneas Before Dido', by Sir James Thornhill. Great Britain, ca. 1720.
Physical description
Oil painting design for staircase at Canons (probably) depicting Aeneas before Dido.
Dimensions
  • Unframed height: 81.6cm
  • Width: 45.4cm
  • Depth: 1.9cm
Dimensions checked: measured; 11/01/1999 by sp/nh/dw
Style
Gallery label
British Galleries: Sir James Thornhill painted numerous decorations for private patrons as well as public commissions. This design, featuring a scene from classical literature, of Aeneas before Dido with the gods of Olympus, was probably intended for the staircase at Canons, the magnificent home of the Duke of Chandos, near London. Sketches such as this one would have been offered for approval to the client before work began.(27/03/2003)
Object history
Purchased, 1947
Sir James Thornhill (born in 1675, possibly in Woolland, Dorset, died in Stalbridge, Dorset, 1734)
Probably painted in London
Subjects depicted
Summary
Object Type
By 1700 wall paintings were replacing tapestry as a cheaper yet more fashionable decoration for grand halls, staircases and ceilings. Noble or rich families commissioned artists, often from France, Holland and Italy, to decorate their homes with mythological, patriotic or allegorical scenes. These became a sure indicator of wealth and status, as well as demonstrating the owner's learning, allegiance and sophisticated taste. Sketches such as this would have been offered for approval to the client before work began.

People
Sir James Thornhill painted numerous decorations for private patrons as well as public commissions. Between 1715 and 1725 he undertook for James Brydges, Ist Duke of Chandos, some of the decorations at Cannons, his magnificent home near Edgware in Middlesex. The palace was pulled down and the murals destroyed around 1750 after the fraudulent speculations of the South Sea Bubble bankrupted the Duke.

Subjects Depicted
This design, depicting Aeneas before Dido with the gods of Olympus, was probably intended for the staircase at Cannons. The subject is taken from Virgil's poem the Aeneid, written in the 1st century BC. It celebrated the legendary foundation of the Roman state by the descendants of Aeneas who had escaped from the destruction of Troy.
Bibliographic reference
Victoria and Albert Museum, Department of Engraving, Illustration and Design & Department of Paintings, Accessions 1947, London: HMSO, 1950.
Collection
Accession number
P.2-1947

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Record createdMarch 27, 2003
Record URL
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