Apollo Magazine

Gods, Heroes and Traitors: The History Image around 1800

The Albertina Museum considers how painters such as Jacques-Louis David and Henry Fuseli sought to measure themselves against the ancient past

The Flood (1797), Joseph Anton Koch. Albertina, Vienna

By the late 18th century, history painting had become firmly entrenched at the pinnacle of the hierarchy of genres. This exhibition at the Albertina Museum in Vienna (2 June–27 August) brings together works by painters such as Jacques-Louis David, Henry Fuseli and Joseph Anton Koch, to explore the variety of ways in which they took on the challenge of measuring their art against grand subjects from the Bible, from mythology or from classical history. Highlights include monumental works such as The Combat of Diomedes (1776) by Jacques-Louis David, depicting an episode from the Trojan War, while smaller-scale works such as Fuseli’s Teiresias foretells the Future to Odysseus (1780–85) reveals the Swiss artist’s fascination with Homer’s The Odyssey. Find out more on the Albertina’s website.

Preview belowView Apollo’s Art Diary

The Combat of Diomedes (1776), Jacques-Louis David. Albertina, Vienna

Jupiter, Neptune and Pluto (1789–90), Heinrich Friedrich Füger. Albertina, Vienna

Teiresias Foretells the Future to Odysseus (1780–85), Henry Fuseli. Albertina, Vienna

Tancred baptising Clorinda (1770), Angelica Kauffman. Albertina, Vienna

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