Esther M. Zimmer Lederberg
Ganymede Riding the Eagle: Domenico Lorenzi, 1501-1600
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Ganymede Riding the Eagle: Domenico Lorenzi, 1501-1600
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An "erastes", an adult man, when enamoured
of a male youth, an "eromenos", he offered
as a gift to the eromenos, a bird. The bird was often a cockerel. It became
popular to use an Eagle to symbolize the idea of a ganymede.
Both Ganymedes and Cupids are pretty boys, and are often conflated together.
Often artistic works, sculpture or visual art such as paintings show flight,
which is intended to symbolize the uplifting sensations of love. Thus scenes
of Eagles raping a ganymede or a cupid figure intend not violence, but the
pleasures of love.
Why an Eagle? An Eagle is a raptor, the name suggestive of rapture or to
ravish, to enrapture.