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Jupiter destroying Crimes, Paolo Veronese, Louvre.
JUPITER AND EUROPA. See Europa, Rape of.
JUPITER AND GANYMEDE. See
Ganymede.
JUPITER, INFANCY OF, Giulio Romano,
National Gallery, London; wood, H.
3 ft. 5 in. × 5 ft. 9 in. Sleeping infant in a
cradle, attended by three women, on a small
verdant island, on the further side of which
are two groups of musicians (the Curetes).
Formerly in the Orleans Gallery, then in
that of Lord Northwick at Cheltenham,
whence purchased in 1859. The landscape
is possibly by Giambattista Dossi.—Cat. Nat.
Gal.
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Jupiter and Io, Correggio, Vienna Museum.
JUPITER AND IO, Correggio, Vienna Museum; canvas, H. 5 ft. 1 in. × 2 ft. 3 in. Io, nude, sitting on a little hill, is embraced by Jupiter in a cloud; in lower corner, a hind's head drinking from a stream. Painted about 1530-32 (?) for Emperor Charles V. (?). Passed from Spain to Milan, where it belonged to the sculptor Leone Leoni, whose son Pompeo sold it to Rodolph II., was taken to Vienna, and thus escaped the fate of the Leda and the Danaë. Old copy in the Berlin Museum; mutilated when in the Orleans collection, like the Leda, by Louis the Pious, and passed with it to Berlin. Engraving of the Vienna original by G. Duchange (1705), by Bartolozzi, Van der Steen, Mayer, H. Cramer, Réveil, J. Johnson. Berlin copy engraved by Desrochers.—Meyer, Correggio, 344, 489; Künst. Lex., i. 439; Landon, Œuvres, viii. Pl. 62; Larousse, ix. 777; Réveil, xii. 817.
By Andrea Schiavone, Hermitage, St. Petersburg.
JUPITER AND LEDA. See Leda.
JUSTA AND RUFINA, SS., Murillo,
Seville Museum; canvas, H. 6 ft. 9 in. × 5
ft. 11 in. Standing, looking front, holding
between them a model of the Giralda, as it
was before the Christian alterations; each
has a palm in left hand; in front, vases lying
on ground. Painted about 1676 for
high altar of Church of Capuchin Convent,
Seville. Companion to SS. Leandro and