Volcanic vulvas and hermaphrodite marble: Ovid’s Metamorphoses reshaped at the Rijksmuseum

A picture


Artists from Bernini to Louise Bourgeois are brought together in a new exhibition exploring the uncomfortable erotic parables of the ancient Roman poetOn three massive screens in a darkened room, snakes glide over the face of artist Juul Kraijer – covering her eyes, caressing her lips.She is the silent but terrifying snake-headed Medusa, and one of the surprises in an exhibition at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam revolving around Greek and Roman myths.While the show features rarely lent works from masters such as Caravaggio, Bernini, Rodin and Brâncuși, it marries them with modern artists who reinterpret the legends where male gods do all they can to get their wicked way and the powerless are punished.Transgender bodies, bare breasts and even a volcanic vulva appear in artworks inspired by Roman poet Ovid’s masterpiece, Metamorphoses.Taco Dibbits, general director of the Rijksmuseum, believes the 200 myths and legends from this ancient epic poem still speak to our uncertain times.

“The Metamorphoses have inspired artists for over 2,000 years and the subject is very relevant today, when everything is changing,” he says.“Things are morphed into other forms.People morph into other people.It’s about the force of nature and giving an explanation to our passions, to our sadness, to our fears.That’s what makes it so intensely human.

”The show features plaster models by Auguste Rodin, with figures emerging from crude rock like the female sculpture created by Pygmalion in Ovid’s legend, who comes to life.There is a room inspired by Leda and the Swan, with Zeus “seducing” the Spartan queen by taking the bird’s form.It also includes a rare loan from the Louvre.Gian Lorenzo Bernini’s 17th-century carving of Sleeping Hermaphroditus – which sets an ancient Roman sculpture of a hermaphrodite with male and female sexual organs on a lifelike marble mattress – was inspired by Ovid’s story of a couple’s bodies merging in sexual union.There are some uncomfortable outcomes for women in the tales.

Jupiter assumes the form of a cloud or shower of gold to impregnate his female target.As one explanatory board admits: “His loves are rarely tender – more often coercive and one-sided.”Modern artists, particularly women, give another point of view: South African sculptor Nandipha Mntambo’s 2009 bronze of Jupiter as a bull is cast into a powerful, female form.The story of Arachne, who challenged the goddess Minerva to a weaving contest and was eventually transformed into a spider, becomes a massive bronze spider statue created by the late French-American artist Louise Bourgeois.A room about chaos and creation features Cuban-American artist Ana Mendieta’s Birth (Gunpowder Works).

It depicts a female body made from earth and water, with what the gallery describes as a large “vulva-like form containing smouldering ash”,Frits Scholten, senior curator of sculpture, says there is a level of modern discomfort with the sexualisation of rape in some of Ovid’s stories and the art they inspired,“All these early stories in Ovid were reinterpreted by each generation and our generation looks at them in a different way,” he says,“We do address the fact that it’s often not very friendly to women,“At the same time, we say that you have to be nuanced in your view: these were scenes from fantasy, from ancient fairy tales, and they were often symbolic.

I’m not saying that they are OK, but they exist, they are part of our culture and part of our history.”Scholten points to a copy of a painting of Leda and the Swan, once created by the Italian Renaissance master Michelangelo.“That’s a bedchamber piece,” he said.“You can be fairly sure that it hung over a bed in a palace in Italy.The original one by Michelangelo went to France and was destroyed by the French queen – she didn’t like it.

So it is about power.”In celebrating these stories of change and transformation, Dibbits says the exhibition is ultimately about hope.“It gives a form to our fears, to the violence change often brings forth, but also the softness and the sweetness of it,” he says.“Everything undergoes a metamorphosis but the soul stays.That’s the hope: we haven’t lost our souls.

” Metamorphoses is at the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, from 6 February to 25 May
cultureSee all
A picture

‘One of the most stunning sights in the country’: your picks for UK town of culture

From pirates and skateboarders in Hastings to legends and locks in Devizes, from dolphins in Scarborough to the ‘artists’ town’ of Kirkcudbright, readers put forward their favourite placesCulture secretary Lisa Nandy has launched a search for the UK’s first “town of culture”, similar to the city of culture programme, which honoured Bradford last year. After the Guardian’s writers nominated theirs – including Ramsgate in Kent, Falmouth in Cornwall, Abergavenny in Monmouthshire and Portobello in Edinburgh – we asked readers which UK towns they would put forward.Culture in Hastings grows out of the shingle and the wind and the friction between past and present. You can feel it in the fishing fleet hauled up on the beach, still part of daily life, and then a short walk away in bold contemporary spaces showing work that speaks far beyond the town. It shows up in events that belong to the people who live there; Jack in the Green spilling through the streets; Pirate Day turning the whole place into a shared act of play; music competitions that quietly bring international talent into a town that never pretends to be grand

A picture

‘It’s an opportunity for bonding’ – my quest to become a Black dad who can do his daughters’ hair

For me – and many other Black men – my experience of hair begins and ends in the barbershop. But as my two daughters get older, I’m determined to make ‘salon night’ pain free – and maybe even enjoyable The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.In the basement of Larry King’s salon in Marylebone, London, stylist and curly hair advocate Jennie Roberts is giving me a much-needed pep talk

A picture

Jimmy Kimmel on Trump: ‘We are now at the women-should-smile-more stage of his presidency’

Late-night hosts dug into Donald Trump’s deflections from the Jeffrey Epstein files and the backlash to Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl half-time show.Jimmy Kimmel kept the focus on the Epstein files on Tuesday, because it’s “a story that Donald Trump wishes would go away. But it won’t just go away. It’s the kind of story that makes headlines, and he knows that. So what he does is he bombards us with a dozen other crazy things to try to flood the zone

A picture

The Guide #228: Against ​my ​better ​judgment​,​ A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms ​has ​me ​back in Westeros

Just when I thought I was out … just when I thought I would no longer have that sweeping, ever so slightly irritating theme tune ringing around my head for hours on end, or feel the need to remember the difference between House Tyrell, Tully or Arryn, I suddenly find myself pulled back in to the Game of Thrones extended universe. The blame for this goes to A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, the likably low-key Game of Thrones spin-off series about a cloth-eared hedge knight and his shrewd child squire currently ambling through its first season on HBO/Sky Atlantic.Before its arrival, I had departed Westeros for good. My faith had first been shaken by that rushed, badly plotted final season of Game of Thrones proper, which bashed to bits six previous seasons’ worth of finely tuned political intrigue and fascinating character dynamics in a succession of endless (often badly lit) CGI-laden battles, before flambéing them in dragon fire. Worse came with House of the Dragon, a dreary, po-faced, endlessly withholding slog of a prequel series, the enjoyment of which seemed to rest entirely on whether the viewer was familiar with deep lore buried within a Westeros history book that George RR Martin wrote instead of cracking on with that sixth novel

A picture

Randa Abdel-Fattah and Louise Adler to headline alternative to cancelled Adelaide writers’ week

The two figures at the centre of the Adelaide festival controversy will reunite to headline the alternative to the cancelled 2026 Adelaide writers’ week.Palestinian Australian academic and writer Randa Abdel-Fattah and AWW’s former director Louise Adler will appear together at Constellations: Not Writers’ Week, a hastily compiled series of events scheduled to start on 28 February in response to the Adelaide festival board’s decision to scrap Australia’s flagship annual literary festival.Abdel-Fattah’s invitation to speak in 2026 was withdrawn by the board after controversy and complaints over her past statements, including a social media post claiming Zionists had “no claim to cultural safety” and a Facebook profile image of a paraglider with a Palestinian flag parachute, which was posted the day after the 7 October attack on Israel.Abdel-Fattah recently told the Full Story podcast that the “cultural safety” statement had been taken out of context and that the paraglider image was “an iconic symbol of freedom” for Palestinians under siege.Adler, who resigned in protest at the decision, will appear in conversation at the Adelaide town hall on 1 March

A picture

Jon Stewart on Epstein files: ‘I’m just not sure anybody is going to be held accountable’

Late-night hosts reacted to the latest batch of Epstein files, which failed to redact several victims’ names and photos while still protecting Donald Trump.Jon Stewart returned to his Monday night desk at the Daily Show fuming at the lack of consequences for the men named in the files related to the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein – which still have not been fully released, though the justice department published another somewhat redacted batch on Friday.There have been consequences for “none of these dudes”, he said. “They’ve been on the plane. They’ve been on the island