Taken from Ovid’s Metamorphoses, this scene shows the nymph Daphne fleeing from Apollo. In her flight, Daphne calls upon the aid of her father, the river god Peneus, and is transformed into a laurel tree just before Apollo reaches her.
Both this painting and its pair DPG 179, also displayed on this wall, personify the theme of rejected love, dramatized by the wild pursuits of Pan and Apollo. They are ultimately exempla of the victory of Chastity, using pagan subject matter to convey a key Christian virtue.