The Building of the Trojan Horse
Oil on canvas: 75 7/8 x 140 7/8 in.
c. 1773-4
 
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The Building of the Trojan Horse
Artist: Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo
(Italian, 1727-1804)
Oil on canvas: 75 7/8 x 140 7/8 in.
c. 1773-4
The Ella Gallup Sumner and Mary Catlin Sumner Collection Fund, 1950.658

The story represented here is a scene from Greek history as told by Virgil in the Aeneid. In their quest to conquer the walled city of Troy, the Greeks resolved to victoriously end their siege by means of trickery. They built a giant wooden horse in which their soldiers were hidden and offered it to Troy as a supposed gesture of conciliation. During the night, the soldiers emerged from the horse and attacked the city. The moment shown here is during the construction of the horse. It is known that the artist painted two other scenes drawn from this story, The Procession of the Horse into Troy, and The Greeks Emerging from the Horse inside the Walls of Troy, but the finished versions of these compositions appear to be lost.
 


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