[1][2] The painting was exhibited at the Salon of Paris of 1861, and was for a long time kept in the private collection of the French royal family.
In fact, it was bought the same year, when Emperor Napoleon III was visiting the Salon, he immediately decided to buy it and spent in the purchase 15,000 francs.
[3][4] The canvas depicts a satyr while attempting to kidnap a nymph in a forest, of which only part of the lawn and foliage can be glimpsed, in a clear reference to the Greek mythology so admired by the artist.
Cabanel also shows the typical features of a Greek satyr, with his goat's legs, man's bust and with a classic pan flute tied alongside.
[5] The depiction makes it clear that it is a kidnapping, given the resistance posed by the beautiful nymph, with the movement of her struggling arms, and her legs, while she at the same time is being held by the satyr.