Aeneas and the Sibyl in the Underworld
Jan Brueghel the Younger, 1630s
About this artwork
Step into the shadowy depths of classical mythology with Jan Brueghel the Younger's *Aeneas and the Sibyl the Underworld* (1630s), a captivating oil on copper painting now housed in the Metropolitan Museum Art's European Paintings collection This small-scale gem, measuring just 10½ × 14⅛ inches, draws from Virgil's *Aeneid*, where the hero Aeneas, guided by the Cumaeanyl, journeys through Hades to seek prophecies about Rome's destiny from his late father. Brueghel the Younger1601–1678), heir to his father's renowned Antwerp workshop, infuses the scene with Flemish Baroque flair—blending learned classicism, moral allegory, and playful fantasy. The choice of copper as a support creates a luminous, jewel-like surface ideal for intricate details, revealing tormented souls, bizarre architecture, and eerie supernatural glows upon close inspection. Echoing his father Jan Brueghel the Elder and ultimately Hieronymus Bosch's hellish visions, this work traces a rich Flemish lineage of transforming nightmarish underworlds into visually thrilling narratives. Nudes of Aeneas, the Sibyl, and damned figures heighten its dramatic intensity. A gift to the Met in 1991, this piece exemplifies Northern Baroque's enduring love for entertaining yet instructive art, inviting visitors to ponder antiquity's echoes in early modern Europe.