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John Gibson  1790-1866

John Gibson Hylas Surprised by the Naiades 1827-?36, exhibited 1837
Hylas Surprised by the Naiades  1827-?36, exhibited 1837

Marble
object: 1600 x 1194 x 718 mm
sculpture

Presented by Robert Vernon 1847

N01746
According to Greek mythology, Hylas was the beautiful son of King Thiodomus. Herakles (Hercules), having killed the King, took Hylas as his servant and lover. They joined the Argonauts, led by Jason, in their search for the Golden Fleece. When their ship was forced to make for land, Hylas went ashore to fetch water at a fountain. The nymphs of the fountain (or naiads) thought him so beautiful that they pulled him into the water so that he might always live with them. The inscription in Greek which Gibson chiselled into the marble translates as 'Beautiful Hylas'.
 (From the display caption March 1993)