Languages of Baroque
Iconography
Iconography developed into a complex language largely expressed in unity throughout all of the arts.
While the precepts of religious iconography were responding to changes in the political and religious landscape, the same was true of secular iconography, which became more complex. Expressed in a variety of motifs – mythological themes to portraits and lives; apotheosis to battles; symbolic representations and allegories to genre painting and landscapes – iconography developed into a complex language largely expressed in unity throughout all of the arts. During the Baroque period, in both religious and secular art, the iconographic theme was directly involved with the problem of allegorical representation. All artists, therefore, used specific handbooks to attend to the complex allegories that they frequently employed.
The Hunt of Diana

1616–1617
Borghese Gallery
Rome, Latium, Italy
Domenico Zampieri, or Domenichino
Oil on canvas
The canvas was painted for Cardinal Pietro Aldobrandini, nephew of the preceding Pope Clement VIII, who had a strong dislike for the Borghese family. However, Cardinal Scipione wanted the painting for himself and had it forcibly removed from the artists studio, imprisoning the artist for several days.