The Cyclops (Redon)

It was painted in oils on board, then mounted on wood, and is now in the Kröller-Müller Museum in the Netherlands.

Galatea is shown asleep on the lower right, her naked body blending into the flowery hill slope.

In the upper half of the painting, the head and shoulders of Polyphemus tower above a mountain ridge as he turns his one eye in the naiad's direction.

It appears Polyphemus has hidden himself from the nymph behind the rocky terrain, too shy to directly confront her "helpless" form.

[2] Although the name given the painting refers to the figure of Classical myth, the subject may also carry overtones of the one-eyed giants that populate the folklore of the Aquitaine region where Redon grew up.