Diana

Edward Francis McCartan American

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 774

In Roman mythology, Diana was a daughter of Jupiter and the twin sister of the sun god, Apollo. A maiden goddess, she was associated with forests and the hunt, and artists often depicted her with a bow and arrows, a hound, or a stag. As Apollo’s sister, Diana also came to symbolize the moon (and the cycles of fertility); thus, she is often represented with a crescent moon in her hair. The elongated bodies of McCartan’s huntress and hound and the dark, glossy surface present a highly stylized interpretation of the subject.

Diana, Edward Francis McCartan (American, Albany, New York 1879–1947 New Rochelle, New York), Bronze, gilt

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