The Feast of the Gods is an oil painting by the Italian Renaissance master Giovanni Bellini, with substantial additions by Titian, who added all the landscape to the left and centre. It is one of a cycle of paintings on mythological subjects produced for Alfonso I d'Este, the Duke of Ferrara, for his camerino d'alabastro in the Castello Estense, Ferrara. It is one of the few mythological pictures of the Venetian artist, who completed it in 1514. After his death soon afterwards , Titian probably modified the landscape on the left to match it to his The Bacchanal of the Andrians , also in... Alfonso's camerino. A more thorough reworking in about 1529 added more landscape, adding the mountain behind the figures. It is now in the National Gallery of Art. The scene depicted conflates two episodes in Ovid's Fasti. Priapus, on the right, is attempting to seduce the sleeping nymph Lotis, but is prevented from success by the bray of Silenus' donkey. Around are the drunken Gods: Jupiter has an eagle next to him, Poseidon is caressing Cybele and Ceres, while Hermes is languidly lying on a barrel.
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| Artist: | Giovanni Bellini, Titian |
| Artform: | Painting |
| Date begun: | 1514 |
| Date completed: | 1529 |
| Genre: | History painting |
| Height: | 5' 7" |
| Width: | 6' 2" |