
Author: Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbein
Description: Hector Admonishes Paris for His Softness and Exhorts Him to Go to War
Year: 1786
Medium: oil paint
Location: Augusteum – Oldenburg, Germany

Author: Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbein
Description: Hector Admonishes Paris for His Softness and Exhorts Him to Go to War
Year: 1786
Medium: oil paint
Location: Augusteum – Oldenburg, Germany

Title: Two Men Contemplating the Moon
Author: Caspar David Friedrich
Year: 1825
Style: Romanticism
Media: oil, canvas
Location: Metropolitan Museum of Art – New York City, USA

Title: Diana Bathing, with the Stories of Actaeon and Callisto
Author: Rembrandt
Year: 1634
Style: Baroque
Genre: mythological painting
Media: oil, canvas

Title: The Colossus
Author: Francisco de Goya
Year: 1808
Medium: Oil on canvas
Location: Museo del Prado, Madrid

Title: Automedon with the Horses of Achilles
Author: Henri Regnault
Year: 1868
Medium: oil paint
Location: Museum of Fine Arts Boston

Title: Hercules Removes Cerberus from the Gates of Hell
Author: Johann Köler
Year: 1855
Medium: oil on canvas
Location: Art Museum of Estonia

Title: Diana and Apollo Killing Niobe’s Children
Author: Jacques-Louis David
Year: 1772
Style: Neoclassicism
Media: oil, canvas
Location: Dallas Museum of Art

Title: Archduke Leopold Wilhelm and the artist in the archducal picture gallery in Brussels
Author: David Teniers the Younger
Year: 1653
Genre: interior view
Medium: oil on canvas

Title: Medusa
Author: Caravaggio
Year: 1597
Style: Baroque
Genre: mythological painting
Media: oil, canvas
Location: Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Italy
Medusa was a Gorgon monster, a terrifying female creature from the Greek Mythology. While descriptions of Gorgons vary across Greek literature, the term commonly refers to any of three sisters who had hair of living, venomous snakes, and a horrifying visage that turned those who beheld it to stone. Traditionally, while two of the Gorgons were immortal, Stheno and Euryale , their sister Medusa was not, and was slain by the mythical hero Perseus, the legendary founder of Mycenae and of the Perseid dynasty. According to the story, she was killed by Perseus, who avoided direct eye contact by using a mirrored shield. After Medusa’s death, her decapitated head continued to petrify those that looked at it.
[SOURCE:wikiart.org]

Title: Bellona Calling Mars to War
Author: Lagrenée, Louis Jean François
Year: 18th century
Medium: Oil on canvas