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Big Apple Atalanta

Jaxon Northon

oil on canvas | 2025
48" x 36"

INFORMATION

STYLE:

  • Portraiture
  • Narrative Realism
  • Contemporary Allegory

THEMES:

  • Symbols
  • Mythology
  • Feminine Power

KEY CHARACTERISTICS:

  • Elegance
  • Jewelry Signifiers
  • Symbolic Object Use

On View At: Bibliotheque
54 Mercer Street, New York, NY 10013

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Big Apple Atalanta

$12,000
About This Artwork:

“Abandoned at birth because her father wanted a son, Atalanta was raised in the wilderness by a bear sent by the goddess Artemis.” The myth begins in rejection and survival, a girl by the wilderness itself. In Big Apple Atalanta, Jaxon Northon draws that inheritance into the present, painting her as a woman of defiance and self-possession, rooted in the figure of Joyel McDaniels of New York City.


Every detail in the portrait carries a trace of her legend. The golden apple glints in her hand — Aphrodite’s snare, the lure that cost Atalanta her freedom. Around her arm coils a serpent, at once talisman and warning. The lion’s head buckled at her waist evokes the fate that bound her to Hippomenes, transformed together into beasts condemned never to love. Even the downward gesture of her hand recalls the footrace — a reminder that Atalanta’s fate was tied to the ground she conquered with speed.

 

And yet, Northon stages her not as victim of a god’s plot but as something closer to defiance itself. The portrait is taut, the figure alive with self-possession. She looks directly outward, her gaze steady, as if to say the myth may have been written but the woman is still her own. “Atalanta became a fearless huntress — a wild woman symbol of independence, living free of the constraints of society or man.” The backdrop opens onto farmland and sky, a stage where contest and destiny once played out, but here it feels secondary. What commands the canvas is her stance, her will, her unshakable knowledge of self.


Painted with Northon’s characteristic precision, the work fuses contemporary portraiture with mythic resonance, bridging antiquity and the present. In this retelling, Atalanta’s legacy is not one of defeat or metamorphosis, but of clarity: the knowledge that even gods cannot diminish the strength of human spirit.

LISTEN TO THE ARTWORK

About the Artist

Jaxon Northon

Jaxon Northon, an American portrait artist and illustrator born in Reno, Nevada, developed his skills as a self-taught oil painter during his teenage years in San Francisco. He is known for his highly realistic paintings of individuals he encounters in everyday life, often those who occupy the fringes of society, a fascination that began with drawing people on buses in San Francisco. Northon's meticulous attention to detail, capturing wrinkles, scars, and other unique features, is central to his work. He views portrait painting as a way to understand the human condition and affirm the importance of each individual within the vastness of existence, believing that each person, though part of a multitude, is a unique and significant entity. To tell a more comprehensive story about his subjects, he incorporates symbolic and metaphorical elements in his compositions, using objects, animals, and text. Northon's work has been exhibited in galleries across the United States and in London, and he participated in The Art Students League of New York's Career Development Program. He also takes on commissioned portraits, with his work appearing in various magazines, publications, and films. His paintings were featured in the documentary "André is an Idiot," which premiered at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival. Northon currently resides in Brooklyn, New York, where he continues to create his compelling portraits.

Request a Custom Commission

Jaxon Northon accepts custom commission requests. This means that you can have a portrait painted of a loved one, or a landscape of your property. Click below to send us a request!

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