Daphne embracing her father, the river-god Peneus, at the left three nymphs bring jars from the 'Story of Apollo and Daphne'

Daphne embracing her father, the river-god Peneus, at the left three nymphs bring jars from the 'Story of Apollo and Daphne' by Master of the Die|Philippe Thomassin|Baldassare Tommaso Peruzzi

Medium

Engraving

Dimensions

Sheet: 10 1/16 × 7 5/16 in. (25.6 × 18.5 cm)

Classification

Prints

Department

Drawings and Prints

Museum

Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY

Credit

Gift of Mrs. John Sichel, 1966

Accession Number

66.747.5

Tags

NymphsMenDaphne

Art Historical Context

This exquisite engraving, titled *Daphne Embracing Her Father, the River-G Peneus, at the Left Three Nymphs Jars* from the *Story of and Daphne*, captures a moment from Ovid's *Metamorphoses*. Daphne, a nymph fleeing the god Apollo's pursuit, clings desperately to her father Pene, begging for salvation. As the three nymphs approach with jars—likely symbolizing ritual waters—the scene builds tension toward Daphne's transformation into a laurel tree, myth emblematic of unrequited love and divine intervention. Created between 1530 and 1560, it reflects the Renaissance fascination with classical m...

About the Artist

Master of the Die|Philippe Thomassin|Baldassare Tommaso Peruzzi · 15251560

**Master of the Die** (fl. 1525–1560) was an anonymous Italian engraver and printmaker active primarily in Rome during the mid-16th century. Named for the distinctive small die he used to sign his prints—a tiny emblematic mark that became his moniker—this elusive artist remains unidentified despite scholarly proposals linking him to figures like Benedetto Verino, Giovanni Francesco Zabello, Tommas...

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