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Niobe and Her Children by Richard Wilson

Niobe and Her Children

Richard Wilson·c. 1748

Historical Context

Niobe and Her Children at Sheffield depicts the mythological subject from Ovid’s Metamorphoses where Apollo and Artemis slay Niobe’s children to punish her boastful pride. Wilson’s treatment of this dramatic narrative through landscape—storm, lightning, and terrified figures fleeing through wild terrain—was revolutionary, using nature itself as the protagonist. Richard Wilson's classical landscape paintings demonstrate his sustained ambition to elevate landscape painting to the status of history painting within the academic hierarchy of genres. By introducing classical and mythological narrative into his landscape compositions — the destruction of Niobe's children, the love of Cimon and Iphigenia, the landscapes of Virgil's Aeneid — he asserted that landscape was not merely topographical decoration but a vehicle for serious intellectual and emotional content. His classical subjects were among his most admired works in eighteenth-century Britain, even as his landscapes of Welsh and British scenery were slower to find appreciation.

Technical Analysis

Dark storm clouds and dramatic lightning dominate the composition, with tiny figures overwhelmed by the landscape’s fury. This sublime treatment of natural power through classical narrative anticipates the Romantic movement’s engagement with terrifying natural forces.

Look Closer

  • ◆The lightning bolt cutting across the stormy sky is a sharp, jagged diagonal that formally echoes the figures' gestures of terror below — nature mirrors human emotion.
  • ◆Niobe's children fall in poses derived from classical battle sarcophagi, Wilson's learned quotation of antiquity applied to the moment of divine punishment.
  • ◆The landscape itself twists and writhes in response to divine wrath — trees bend, water churns — giving Wilson's landscape the expressive animation usually reserved for history painting.
  • ◆A figure sheltering behind a large rock in the foreground provides a visual counterpoint of hiding against the exposed figures being struck — a compositional rhythm of vulnerability and protection.
  • ◆The color palette shifts from warm greens and ochres at the composition's edge to cold steel-blue and grey at the storm's center, organizing meteorological drama through chromatic temperature.

See It In Person

Sheffield Galleries and Museums Trust

Sheffield, United Kingdom

Visit museum website →

Quick Facts

Medium
Oil paint
Dimensions
78.7 × 100.2 cm
Era
Rococo
Style
English Rococo
Genre
Mythology
Location
Sheffield Galleries and Museums Trust, Sheffield
View on museum website →

More by Richard Wilson

Lake Nemi and Genzano from the Terrace of the Capuchin Monastery by Richard Wilson

Lake Nemi and Genzano from the Terrace of the Capuchin Monastery

Richard Wilson·ca. 1756–57

Cader Idris, with the Mawddach River by Richard Wilson

Cader Idris, with the Mawddach River

Richard Wilson·c. 1774

Lake Albano by Richard Wilson

Lake Albano

Richard Wilson·1762

Solitude by Richard Wilson

Solitude

Richard Wilson·c. 1762/1770

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The Madonna with the Seven Founders of the Servite Order

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Theodosius Repulsed from the Church by Saint Ambrose by Alessandro Magnasco

Theodosius Repulsed from the Church by Saint Ambrose

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Arcadian Landscape with Figures by Alessandro Magnasco

Arcadian Landscape with Figures

Alessandro Magnasco·c. 1700