Joseph Mallord William Turner

The Death of Actaeon, with a Distant View of Montjovet, Val d’Aosta

c.1837

Not on display

Artist
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
Medium
Oil paint on canvas
Dimensions
Support: 1509 × 1125 × 29 mm
frame: 1911 × 1535 × 74 mm
Collection
Tate
Acquisition
Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856
Reference
A00909

Display caption

The blurred figures and animals in the foreground of this painting are borrowed and reworked from Titian’s late painting The Death of Actaeon. Having intruded on the sacred grove inhabited by Diana and her naked nymphs, the huntsman Actaeon is punished by being torn to pieces by his own hounds.

Turner sets the action in Italy’s Val d’Aosta, which he had visited in 1836. Unusually, on that occasion he travelled with a companion, the Scottish land-owner and artist HAJ Munro of Novar, who already possessed many of his pictures, and for whom this unfinished work was presumably intended.

Gallery label, February 2010

Does this text contain inaccurate information or language that you feel we should improve or change? We would like to hear from you.

You might like

In the shop