JACOPO del SELLAIO
(b. ca. 1441, Firenze, d. 1493, Firenze)

Scenes from the Story of the Argonauts

c. 1465
Tempera on wood, gilt ornaments, 50 x 142 cm
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

In two panels in the Metropolitan Museum, one by Biagio d'Antonio and another by Jacopo del Sellaio, the story of Jason and the Argonauts unfolds in a continuous narrative. In the panel by Jacopo del Sellaio, Jason is charged by King Pelias to retrieve the Golden Fleece. Jason then mounts his horse and consults the centaur Chiron on Mount Pelion together with Hercules and Orpheus. In the distance is Jason's ship, the Argo.

The two panels recount episodes from the story of Jason and the Golden Fleece in vivid detail. They have been considered both cassone fronts and spalliere, or wainscoting, panels. Though their dimensions are consistent with those of many cassone panels, they have independent moldings and show none of the damages characteristic of cassone panels and were, therefore, certainly designed to be installed where they would not have been kicked or accessible to children.

There has been almost constant controversy about the panels' authorship since they appeared on the art market in the first years of the twentieth century. Two panels are not by the same artist; collaboration on series of panels such as these was common practice.