Tullia Running Her Chariot over the Body of Her Father is a 1735 painting by Michel-François Dandré-Bardon which depicts Roman princess Tullia (later Rome's last queen) running over her father King Servius Tullius's dead body with her chariot.[1] Upon the submission of this work Bardon was accepted into the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture.[2][3]
Tullia Running Her Chariot over the Body of Her Father | |
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Artist | Michel-François Dandré-Bardon |
Year | 1735 |
See also
edit- Tullia Drives over the Corpse of her Father, by Jean Bardin
- Tullia driving her Chariot over her Father, by Giuseppe Bartolomeo Chiari
- Tullia Driving her Chariot over the Body of her Father by François-Guillaume Ménageot
References
edit- ^ Brugerolles, Emmanuelle; Boucher, François (2004). Boucher, Watteau and the origin of the Rococo: an exhibition of 18th century drawings from the collection of the École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts. University of Michigan: École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts. p. 190. ISBN 9782840561743.
- ^ Lefrançois, Thierry; Stewart, Marion C.; Rosenberg, Pierre (1987). French paintings 1500-1825, the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. University of Michigan: The Museum. p. 139.
- ^ "Artist Info".
Further reading
edit- Women in Livy: Tullia Minor
- Rosenberg, Pierre (1974). "Dandré-Bardon as a Draughtsman: A Group of Drawings at Stuttgart". Master Drawings. 12 (2): 137–206. JSTOR 1553256.