Achelous and Hercules

Achelous and Hercules
ArtistThomas Hart Benton Edit this on Wikidata
Year1947
Dimensions62+78 by 264+18 inches (159.6 by 671 cm)
LocationSmithsonian American Art Museum
Accession No.1985.2 Edit this on Wikidata

Achelous and Hercules is a 1947 mural painting by Thomas Hart Benton. It depicts a bluejeans-wearing Hercules wrestling with the horns of a bull, a shape the protean river god Achelous was able to assume. The myth was one of the explanations offered by Greco-Roman mythology for the origin of the cornucopia, a symbol of agricultural abundance. Benton sets the scene during harvest time in the U.S. Midwest.

The mural was formerly displayed at a department store in Kansas City, Missouri, and is now in the collections of the Smithsonian. It was the first of Benton's murals on a river-related theme.[1]

  1. ^ Justin Wolff, Thomas Hart Benton: A Life (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2012), p. 287.