Although Callirhoe has no presence in classical iconography, poetry or theatre, starting with the early modern period, the myth of Callirhoe has influenced a number of works by several western artists, who incorporated traces of her story in their art, or even adapted it as a whole. Callirhoe's myth inspired the characters of Aminta and Lucrina in
Giovanni Battista Guarini's tragicomedy
Il pastor fido, whose tragic tale is narrated early in the play by the protagonists, who face a dilemma between love and duty to the state. It also influenced
Luca Marenzio's lyrical madrigal, who expanded upon the play's brief mention of the story of Aminta; like in the Greek myth, Aminta asks a deity (in this case
Diana, goddess of the wild) to avenge him after his rejection by Lucrina, but chooses to kill himself rather than sacrifice the girl. As he lies dying, Lucrina suddenly experiences a love epiphany, and joins him in death using his blade. Meanwhile
André Cardinal Destouches' 1712 opera
Callirhoé deviated a bit from Pausanias' writing, as in it the princess Callirhoé is unhappily betrothed to Corésus, the high priest of Bacchus, but he orders his priests to wreck the city with fire after he catches her with her beloved. The play is more of a historical drama, stripped of the supernatural element, with themes of abuse of power by the phanatical clergy. The moment of Coresus' sacrifice in place of Callirhoe is the subject of
Jean-Honoré Fragonard's painting
Coresus Sacrificing Himself to Save Callirhoe, first exhibited in 1765 and now kept in the Louvre. Coresus, portrayed as an androgynous youth, plunges the knife into his own chest, and Callirhoe has fainted next to the tripod, a scene designed to invoke strong impressions; the painting sparked an interest for the myth of Callirhoe to many other artists who produced their own paintings. Although the painting did enjoy a lot of praise, it also received criticism, particularly for the figure of Coresus and his effeminate appearance. Meanwhile his preparatory sketch for the work (now in the Musee de Beaux-Arts, Angers) shows a traditional priest with a beard and a moustache who has not yet found his androgynous form, while Callirhoe holds rose garlands and lowers her eyes. Fragonard seems to have reworked the original composition several times. Callirhoe also inspired poetry; the English poet
Walter Savage Landor treated her tale in dramatic Latin hexameter among several other Greek stories he adapted for his idylls and poems, the
Hellenics. == See also ==