, 1786, Musée National du Château et des Trianons|246x246px
Paintings The story has been the subject of notable paintings by
Agnolo Bronzino,
Jean-Léon Gérôme (
Pygmalion and Galatea),
Honoré Daumier,
Edward Burne-Jones (four major works from 1868 to 1870, then again in larger versions from 1875 to 1878 with the title
Pygmalion and the Image),
Auguste Rodin,
Ernest Normand,
Paul Delvaux,
Francisco Goya,
Franz von Stuck,
François Boucher,
Eduardo Chicharro y Agüera and
Thomas Rowlandson, among others. There have also been numerous sculptures of the "awakening".
Literature Ovid's Pygmalion has inspired many works of literature, some of which are listed below. The popularity of the Pygmalion myth surged in the 19th century.
Poems England •
John Gower's "Pygmaleon and his Statue" in Book 4 of the
Confessio Amantis (1390) •
John Marston's "Pigmalion", in "The Argument of the Poem" and "The Authour in prayse of his precedent Poem" (1598) •
John Dryden's poem "Pygmalion and the Statue" (1697–1700) •
Thomas Lovell Beddoes's "Pygmalion, or the Cyprian Statuary" (1823–25) • William Cox Bennett's poem "Pygmalion" from his work ''
Queen Eleanor's Vengeance and Other Poems'' (1856) •
Arthur Henry Hallam's poem "Lines Spoken in the Character of Pygmalion" from his work
Remains in verse and prose of Arthur Henry Hallam: With a preface and memoir (1863) •
Robert Buchanan's poem "Pygmalion the Sculptor" in his work
Undertones (1864) •
William Morris's poem "Earthly Paradise" in which he includes the section "Pygmalion and the Image" (1868) •
William Bell Scott's "Pygmalion" •
Thomas Woolner's long poem "Pygmalion" (1881) •
Frederick Tennyson's "Pygmalion" from
Daphne and Other Poems (1891) •
Robert Graves's "Pygmalion to Galatea" (1926) and "Galatea and Pygmalion"
Scotland •
Andrew Lang's "The New Pygmalion or the Statue's Choice" (1911)
Ireland •
Emily Henrietta Hickey's
A Sculptor and Other Poems (1881) •
Patrick Kavanagh's "Pygmalion" (1938) •
Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin's "Pygmalion's Image" (1991)
Germany •
Friedrich Schiller's poem "The Ideals" (Die Ideale) (1795–6)
United States •
Sara Jane Lippincott (Grace Greenwood)'s "Pygmalion" (1851) •
Elizabeth Stuart Phelps' "Galatea" from ''
Harper's Weekly'' (1884) •
Edward Rowland Sill's "The Lost Magic" (1900) •
H.D.'s "Pygmalion" (1913–17) •
Genevieve Taggard's "Galatea Again" (1929) •
Henry James'
Portrait of a Lady (1880–81) •
George Bernard Shaw's play
Pygmalion •
Edgar Neville's play
Prohibido en otoño. •
Tawfiq el-Hakim's play
Pygmalion •
William Schwenck Gilbert's play
Pygmalion and Galatea •
Rousseau's play
Pygmalion, scène lyrique, the first full
melodrama •
Villiers de l'Isle-Adam's novel ''
Tomorrow's Eve'' •
Jacinto Grau's play
El Señor de Pigmalión (1921) •
William Shakespeare's play ''
The Winter's Tale'' (1611)
Opera, ballet, and music • The story of Pygmalion is the subject of
Jean-Philippe Rameau's 1748 opera,
Pigmalion. • It was also the subject of
Georg Benda's 1779
monodrama,
Pygmalion. •
Ramler's poem
Pygmalion was set to music as an aria by
J.C.F.Bach in 1772, and as a
cantata by
Friedrich Benda in 1784. • Pygmalion was the subject of
Gaetano Donizetti's first opera,
Il Pigmalione. •
Fromental Halévy wrote an opera
Pygmalion in the 1820s, but it was not performed. •
Franz von Suppé composed an operetta
Die schöne Galathée, which is based on the characters of Pygmalion and Galatea. • The ballet
Coppélia, about an inventor who makes a life-sized dancing doll, has strong echoes of Pygmalion. • The choreographer
Marius Petipa and the composer Prince Nikita Trubetskoi created a four-act ballet on the subject called
Pygmalion, ou La Statue de Chypre. The ballet was revived in 1895 with the great ballerina
Pierina Legnani.
Stage plays 's stage version, 1871 Though it is not based on the story of Pygmalion, Shakespeare's play
Measure for Measure references Pygmalion in a line spoken by Lucio in Act 3, Scene 2: "What, is there none of Pygmalion's images, newly made woman, to be had now, for putting the hand in the pocket and extracting it clutch'd?" There have also been successful stage-plays based upon the work, such as
W. S. Gilbert's
Pygmalion and Galatea (1871). It was revived twice, in 1884 and in 1888. The play was parodied by the musical 1883 burlesque
Galatea, or Pygmalion Reversed, which was performed at the
Gaiety Theatre with a libretto by
Henry Pottinger Stephens and
W. Webster, and a score composed by
Wilhelm Meyer Lutz. In January, 1872,
Ganymede and Galatea opened at the
Gaiety Theatre. This was a comic version of
Franz von Suppé's
Die schöne Galathee, coincidentally with
Arthur Sullivan's brother,
Fred Sullivan, in the cast. In March 1872,
William Brough's 1867 play
Pygmalion; or, The Statue Fair was revived, and in May of that year, a visiting French company produced
Victor Massé's
Galathée.
George Bernard Shaw's
Pygmalion (1912, staged 1913) owes something to both the Greek Pygmalion and the legend of "King
Cophetua and the beggar maid"; in which a king lacks interest in women, but one day falls in love with a young beggar-girl, later educating her to be his queen. Shaw's
comedy of manners in turn was the basis for the
Broadway musical My Fair Lady (1956), as well as numerous other adaptations.
P. L. Deshpande's play
Ti Fulrani ("Queen of Flowers") is also based on Shaw's
Pygmalion. The play was a huge success in
Marathi theater and has earned many accolades.
Madhu Rye adapted
Pygmalion in Gujarati as
Santu Rangili (1976) which was successful. ==See also==