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Helios Receives Phaethon as His Son
Helios Receives Phaethon as His Son

Helios Receives Phaethon as His Son

Artist Workshop of Jan Leyniers (Flemish, 1630 - 1686)
Date1665-1685
MediumTapestry with wool and silk
DimensionsOverall: 161 1/8 × 167 inches (409.27 × 424.18 cm)
Credit LinePurchase: William Rockhill Nelson Trust
Object number33-17/2
On View
On view
Gallery Location
  • Kirkwood Hall
Gallery Label
This is the second in a series of eight tapestries depicting scenes from the life of Phaeton, from Greek mythology. Here, Helios embraces his son, while seated on a throne surrounded by personifications of the Four Seasons and symbolic figures of Time, including Hours, Days, Months and Years. Phaeton traveled to the palace of his father, the sun god Helios, to ask permission to drive the chariot of the sun across the sky for a day. Previously, Epaphus, son of Zeus and Io, had contended that Helios was not actually Phaeton's father. By driving the chariot, Phaeton believed that he could conclusively prove that he was the son of a god.
Provenance
J. P. Morgan, Sr. (1837-1913), New York, by December 1909-1913 [1];


By descent to his son, J. P. Morgan, Jr. (1867-1943), New York, 1913-November 25, 1932 [1];


Purchased from Morgan by French and Company, New York, stock no. 17698A-H, November 25, 1932-January 30, 1933 [2];


Purchased from French and Company by The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, MO, 1933.


NOTES:


[1] J. P. Morgan, Sr. lent three of the eight tapestries in this series to the Wadsworth Atheneum in December 1909 and they remained there until May 1932. J. P. Morgan, Jr. lent the remaining five tapestries in the series to the Wadsworth Atheneum from March 1928 to August 1932.


[2] Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, French and Company Stock Sheets, box 17, folder 4 and Getty Photo Archive, 76.P.43, Textiles box 9. Morgan consigned five of the eight tapestries to French and Company from 1925 to 1928, but they failed to sell. They were returned to Morgan, who then lent them to the Wadsworth Atheneum (see note 1).

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Phaethon Appears Before Helios
Workshop of Jan Leyniers
1665-1685
33-17/1
Helios Commands the Hours to Harness the Swift Steeds
Workshop of Jan Leyniers
1665-1685
33-17/4
Zeus Strikes Phaethon with a Thunderbolt
Workshop of Jan Leyniers
1665-1685
33-17/7
Phaethon Drives the Chariot of the Sun
Workshop of Jan Leyniers
1665-1685
33-17/6
The Burial of Phaethon
Workshop of Jan Leyniers
1665-1685
33-17/8
Jesus Receives His Cross
Eric Gill
1917
36-6/2
Jar
Workshop of Domenigo
1560-1570
33-626/2