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The second picture of the pair with P484 is part of the story of the birth of the wine god Bacchus. When pregnant his mother Semele was persuaded by the jealous Juno to insist that Jupiter should visit her as a god, not a mortal. Semele was duly consumed in the heat of her lover’s embrace, but Bacchus was saved and sewn into Jupiter’s thigh by Mercury. According to the collector Mariette, Boucher painted the whole series, which hung in the lawyer Derbais’ house in Paris, without charge on the understanding that he would show them to prospective clients. The stratagem appears to have been successful, and a subsequent client, Bachaumont, asked the artist to ‘remember well what you did for Monsieur Derbais’ when he commissioned a landscape from the artist in 1737.

The Wallace Collection

London

Title

Mercury Confiding the Infant Bacchus to the Nymphs

Date

c.1732–1734

Medium

oil on canvas

Measurements

H 230 x W 273 cm

Accession number

P487

Acquisition method

acquired by Richard Seymour-Conway, 4th Marquess of Hertford, 1843; bequeathed to the nation by Lady Wallace, 1897

Work type

Painting

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The Wallace Collection

Hertford House, Manchester Square, London, Greater London W1U 3BN England

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