The Massacre of the Innocents - Peter Paul Rubens

The Massacre of the Innocents

Peter Paul Rubens

$47.00

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Size guide
40×30 cmPerfect for compact walls, corridors or shelves
50×40 cmGreat above a desk or in an entryway
90×60 cmFocal point for a living room or bedroom
  • 380g/m² cotton canvas — certified museum quality
  • Solid wood stretcher bar with 0.75” gallery wrap
  • HD Giclée print — colour-true to the original
  • Ready to hang — hanging hardware included
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The Massacre of the Innocents, painted around 1611–12 by the Flemish master Peter Paul Rubens shortly after his return to Antwerp from Italy, is one of the most visceral history paintings of the entire Baroque. It depicts the biblical slaughter ordered by King Herod in Bethlehem — soldiers wrenching infants from their mothers' arms in a composition built from interlocking, writhing bodies that Rubens drew directly from the classical sculpture and Italian masters he had studied in Rome and Mantua.

The painting's rediscovery in 2002, after centuries in obscurity, caused a sensation: it sold at auction for £49.5 million, a record for an Old Master at the time, confirming what scholars had long suspected from its handling — the raw, muscular energy, the Caravaggesque light, the direct quotation of Titian's "Death of Actaeon" in the fleeing woman at right — that this was Rubens at the height of his early Antwerp power.

Now held in the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto (Thomson Collection), this masterwork is presented here as a premium stretched canvas reproduction, printed on museum-quality matte canvas and hand-wrapped around a sturdy 0.75-inch gallery wrap frame — ready to display and built to last.

Artist Peter Paul Rubens
Year c. 1611–12
Medium Oil on oak panel
Dimensions 55 7/8 x 71 5/8 in. (142 x 182 cm)
Collection Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto
Movement Baroque
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The Massacre of the Innoc... $47.00