Orpheus Instructing a Savage People in Theology and the Arts of Social Life

James Barry Irish

Not on view

A skilled and inventive etcher, Barry was also one of eighteenth-century London’s leading history painters. Born near Cork, the young artist traveled to Italy for five years of study with the support of the philosopher Edmund Burke, a fellow Irishman. Once back in London, Barry joined the Royal Academy and, from 1777 to 1782, painted a series of large canvases to adorn the new Great Room at the Society of Arts, near the Strand. This etching, the first of three compositions devoted to the rise of ancient Greek culture and civilization, shows Orpheus, the inventor of music, playing for a rapt audience of "primitive" Thracians as he points to heaven as his source of inspiration.

Orpheus Instructing a Savage People in Theology and the Arts of Social Life, James Barry (Irish, Cork 1741–1806 London), Etching and engraving; second state of three

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