

The most common meanings have come down to being representative of a survival victim of sexual assault and other forms of harassment or protection from outside harm as the mythological Medusa was able to turn any foe into stone with one glance. Many women in modern times have associated the image of Medusa as a symbol of empowerment and female strength, along with various other meanings.

The blood splatter at the neck brings in the more of the violent and realistic side of what Medusa’s head would have looked like once she was beheaded, emphasizing the gory side of the Greek myth.Ībove: This is a tattoo referencing Medusa with an indigenous pattern painted on her face by an anonymous artist and an anonymous tattoo-ist (medium – tattoo). The gaping facial expression of his face is how Caravaggio envisioned his face when put in a situation of being stunned by his own gaze and executed. He felt that he overpowered this myth and was able to paint such a painting with his face on it instead due to his immunity to the stone-turning gaze of Medusa. The reference of Medusa in this painting portrays how Caravaggio viewed the Greek myth surrounding Medusa. Caravaggio painted his own face in place of Medusa’s to signify that he would be immune to her deadly gaze as it is his own face.

Following the Greek myth when Medusa was stunned by her own image, getting her head cut off by Perseus, and getting placed on the shield. This painting titled, “Medusa,” represents what the shield of Medusa would have looked like. The meaning of Medusa’s image has been changed and distorted through the centuries as different regions of the world have taken in her image and used it to convey their own meanings and stories.Ībove: The first trope is a depiction of Medusa created by Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio in the 1596 or 1597 (medium – canvas painting). Above: This is a sculpture representing what Medusa from Greek mythology would have looked like created by Gian Lorenzo Bernini in 1630.
