Circe Offering the Cup to Ulysses is an oil painting in the Pre-Raphaelite style by John William Waterhouse that was created in 1891.
Circe, a sorceress, offers a cup to Odysseus (commonly Ulysses in English).
Two of Ulysses' crewmen have been transformed into pigs; one can be seen beside Circe's feet on the right, while the other is peering out from behind her throne on the left.
[3] The trick of having a wide view shown in a large mirror behind the subject is used in other paintings by Waterhouse.
Those are both based on Tennyson's poem The Lady of Shalott, where the subject is described as weaving a tapestry of the view in her mirror (a common method still used by weavers).