Landscape with the Fall of Icarus, oil painting long attributed to the Flemish artist Pieter Bruegel, the Elder, but now believed by some scholars to be a copy likely painted in the 1560s of Bruegel’s original work from about 1558, which is thought to be lost. Nonetheless, the composition of the painting is certainly Bruegel’s. Early in his career, Bruegel worked for a successful publisher and print-seller with whom he produced many designs for engravings of popular proverbs. There was a huge demand for these, prompting the artist to reproduce some of the subjects as full-sized paintings.
Here, Bruegel tackles the famous Greek legend about Daedalus and his son Icarus, who were imprisoned on the island of Crete. In a bid to escape, Daedalus made two sets of wings, using feathers and wax. He warned Icarus not to fly too close to the Sun, but the foolish youth took no heed. The wax melted, and Icarus plummeted into the sea and drowned.
This myth was often included in proverb anthologies of the time, as an illustration of the folly of pride and ambition. Bruegel conveyed this moral in an ingenious manner. The flight of Icarus has been miraculous. However, it causes barely a ripple in the tide of human affairs: the plowman and the shepherd go about their daily business, while the ship passes by, without noticing the drowning boy. Similarly, a casual spectator, unaware of the painting’s title, might easily fail to spot the legs of Icarus, in the lower right-hand corner of the picture. Bruegel underlined the moral with other details. The shepherd, as careless as Icarus, is daydreaming, while his sheep wander off into the sea. On the ground, a wallet and sword refer to a popular proverb: “A sword and money need careful hands.” In addition, there is a corpse in the thicket on the left, illustrating the saying: “No plow stops because a man dies.”