The Judgment of Paris
Lucas Cranach the Elder, ca. 1528
About this artwork
In Lucas Cranach the Elder's *The Judgment of Paris*ca. 1528), a captivating oil painting on beechwood panel now housed in the Metropolitan Museum Art, we encounter a timeless myth from classical antiquity reimagined through the lens of the Northern Renaissance. The scene depicts the Trojan prince Paris tasked with judging a beauty contest among the goddesses Juno, Minerva, and Venus, with Cupid hovering nearby as a mischievous witness. Surrounding them are elegant horses and nude female figures, embodying the sensual idealism that defined Cranach's oeuvre. Measuring 40 1/8 x 28 inches, this work showcases the artist's mastery of oil on panel, a medium favored in Germany for its smooth surface that allowed for luminous glazes and intricate details. Cranach, court painter to the Electors of Saxony, was a key figure in the German Renaissance, blending Italianate nudes with Northern precision in landscape and costume. He produced multiple versions of this subject, reflecting the era's humanist revival of Greco-Roman tales amid the Protestant Reformation's cultural shifts. The idealized female forms—slender, poised, and erotically charged—highlight Cranach's signature style, influenced by Venetian art yet distinctly Germanic in its crisp lines and moral undertones. This painting not only celebrates beauty and divine rivalry but also underscores 16th-century fascination with mythology as allegory for human vanity and desire, making it a jewel for visitors pondering art's enduring allure.