Tate Online home Tate Britain Tate Modern Tate Liverpool Tate St Ives
HomeSupportersFeedbackTicketsShop Online
Technology from BT Tate Online together with BT
    Collection    Turner Collection    Oil paintings    Work

View Work InformationView other images for this workCross refer by subjectView texts associated with this workList the related works  356 of 507    
Joseph Mallord William Turner  1775-1851

Joseph Mallord William Turner The Golden Bough exhibited 1834
The Golden Bough  exhibited 1834

Oil on canvas
support: 1041 x 1638 mm frame: 1455 x 2046 x 110 mm
painting

Presented by Robert Vernon 1847

N00371

This subject comes from Virgil’s poem, the Aeneid. The Trojan hero, Aeneas, has come to Cumae to consult the Sibyl, a prophetess. She tells him he can only enter the Underworld to meet the ghost of his father if he offers Proserpine a golden bough cut from a sacred tree.

Turner shows the Sibyl holding a sickle and the freshly cut bough,in front of Lake Avernus, the legendary gateway to the Underworld. The dancing figures are the Fates. Like the snake in the foreground, they hint at death and the mysteries of the Underworld, amidst the beauty of the landscape.

 (From the display caption September 2004)