| Support Type: | Wood Panel |
| Paint Type: | Tempera |
| Current Location: | National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C |
The painting appears as an assemblage of courtly men and women engaging in different acts in a scene that appears to be inside an elegant architectural space. The ceiling, with its brilliantly carved squares with a yellow framing, blends seamlessly with the lighter yellow shade of the framed walls. The ceiling, however, takes a slightly different tone, a lighter shade of orange. Upon it, men and women appear in luxurious hues of gold, red and blue, giving the painting an expensive dimension. The depiction is a biblical story of Solome who is dancing in front of King Herod on the right. Her foot in the air and a hand above her head signify the power she had on the king through her gestures, which made him promise her her heart’s desire as a token of gift for her performance. She asked for the head of St John the Baptist as revenge, as asked by her mother, Herodias. The painting is a marvellous example of a continuous narrative in which the right side shows the dance as the central performance. While in the background, the mother and daughter are contriving John the Baptist’s death, while on the extreme left is the beheading taking place. This, along with the technique of linear perspective, makes this painting one of the celebrated ones of Benozzo Gozzoli
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