ArtvestigeArtvestige
PaintingsArtistsEras
Artvestige

Artvestige

The most comprehensive free reference for European painting. 40,000+ works across ten eras, every one with expert analysis.

Explore

PaintingsArtistsErasData Sources & CreditsContactPrivacy Policy

About

Artvestige is an independent reference and is not affiliated with any museum. All images courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

© 2026 Artvestige. All painting images are public domain / open access.

The judgement of Midas in the contest between Apollo and Pan by Jacob Jordaens

The judgement of Midas in the contest between Apollo and Pan

Jacob Jordaens·1640

Historical Context

This 1640 Judgment of Midas in the Contest between Apollo and Pan depicts the Ovidian myth where King Midas foolishly judges Pan's rustic music superior to Apollo's divine playing, earning himself donkey's ears. The subject allowed Jordaens to moralize about poor judgment while displaying mythological grandeur. Jordaens's mythological paintings belong to the great tradition of Flemish mythological painting that Rubens had established, in which the gods of antiquity inhabit a world of Flemish physicality and sensuous abundance. Like his master and model Rubens, Jordaens treated classical mythology as a vehicle for celebrating the beauty of the human body and the pleasures of the natural world, but his mythology is heavier and more earthbound than Rubens's, his gods more recognizably Antwerp burghers temporarily promoted to divine status. His command of multi-figure compositions in warm dramatic light made him one of the most sought-after painters of monumental mythological subjects in the Spanish Netherlands.

Technical Analysis

The multi-figure mythological scene demonstrates Jordaens' ability to orchestrate dramatic narrative with contrasting figure types—divine beauty versus rustic earthiness—rendered in his characteristic warm, fleshy palette.

Look Closer

  • ◆Midas's donkey ears have just been awarded — he reaches up to touch one, his expression of horrified realisation still forming.
  • ◆Apollo holds his lyre with the negligent ease of divine superiority — his hand barely resting on the strings of his already-won contest.
  • ◆Pan at the left deflates visibly — his pipes hanging lower, his posture collapsing as the judgment goes against him.
  • ◆The assembled nymphs and minor gods witness the judgment with expressions calibrated between suppressed laughter and polite distress.
  • ◆Tmolus the mountain judge occupies the centre — oak leaves in his hair, his arm raised in the decisive gesture of adjudication.

See It In Person

,

Visit museum website →

Quick Facts

Medium
Oil on panel
Dimensions
49.5 × 71.4 cm
Era
Baroque
Style
Flemish Baroque
Genre
Mythology
Location
undefined, undefined
View on museum website →

More by Jacob Jordaens

The Temptation of the Magdalene by Jacob Jordaens

The Temptation of the Magdalene

Jacob Jordaens·c. 1616

Head of an Apostle by Jacob Jordaens

Head of an Apostle

Jacob Jordaens·Date unknown

The Holy Family with Saint Anne and the Young Baptist and His Parents by Jacob Jordaens

The Holy Family with Saint Anne and the Young Baptist and His Parents

Jacob Jordaens·early 1620s and 1650s

The Holy Family with Shepherds by Jacob Jordaens

The Holy Family with Shepherds

Jacob Jordaens·1616

More from the Baroque Period

Allegory of Venus and Cupid by Titian

Allegory of Venus and Cupid

Titian·c. 1600

Portrait of a Noblewoman Dressed in Mourning by Jacopo da Empoli

Portrait of a Noblewoman Dressed in Mourning

Jacopo da Empoli·c. 1600

Jupiter Rebuked by Venus by Abraham Janssens

Jupiter Rebuked by Venus

Abraham Janssens·c. 1612

The Flight into Egypt by Abraham Jansz. van Diepenbeeck

The Flight into Egypt

Abraham Jansz. van Diepenbeeck·c. 1650