Pandora's Box (2024)

Grade Level: 5–6

Students will be introduced to the Greek myth of Pandora by critically analyzing Odilon Redon’s painting Pandora. They will then create their own box with both two- and three-dimensional symbols that represent an emotion to be contained inside of the box and then released to the world.

Pandora's Box (1)

Odilon Redon
French, 1840–1916
Pandora, 1910/1912
oil on canvas, 143.5 x 62.9 cm (56 1/2 x 24 3/4 in.)
National Gallery of Art, Chester Dale Collection

Curriculum Connections

  • Language Arts
  • History/Social Studies

Materials

  • Box to decorate (ex. shoebox, small balsa craft box, or construct your own)
  • Paint
  • Jewels, buttons, miscellaneous items to decorate box
  • Glue
  • Clay to fashion items to be contained in the box

Warm-up Question

What do you think is about to happen in this painting?

Background

According to Greek mythology, in the beginning the earth was free from toil and misery. The land was covered with flowers and the rivers flowed with milk and honey. Earth was inhabited only by men, who had been created by Prometheus. He made them of clay and modeled them after the gods, which angered Zeus, the king of the gods. When Prometheus offended Zeus again by stealing fire from heaven to give to man, Zeus exacted revenge. He ordered Hephaestus, the god of the forge, to create Pandora, the first woman. The gods gave her many traits including beauty, curiosity, charm, and cleverness. Hence her name “Pandora,” meaning “all gifted” or, alternately, “a gift to all.”

Before he left Pandora on earth, Zeus handed her a beautiful box saying, “This is my own special gift to you. Don’t ever open it.” As Zeus anticipated, Pandora’s curiosity got the best of her, and she opened the box, ending earthly paradise. From the small chest flew troubles and woes—sorrow, disease, vice, violence, greed, madness, old age, death—to plague humankind forever. However, Zeus did not realize that hope had been secretly added to the box by Promethesus. When Pandora opened the box and released trouble and woe into the world, hope was there to help people survive.

Pandora was created by French painter Odilon Redon, who lived at the same time as the impressionist artists. While they painted the life they saw around them—the French countryside, the bustle of Paris—Redon painted from his imagination. He suffered a lonely childhood, shut away as an invalid much of the time. He once wrote to a friend, “The events that left their mark on me happened in days gone by, in my head.” He was known as a mystic and a dreamer who was interested in exploring “a reality that is felt.” That is shown here by his concentration on Pandora’s fascination with the gift prior to her opening it. Her attention is fixed on the gift box. In other paintings of the same subject, the consequences of her curiosity are more often portrayed whereas in Redon’s version, Pandora is surrounded by golden shapes, which symbolize an earthly paradise before the box was opened.

Guided Practice

  • What moment of the story has the artist chosen to depict? (The moment in which Pandora is deciding whether or not to open the box.) What makes this moment so dramatic? (We know that her decision to open the box will release plagues, suffering, and evil into the world.) Why might Redon have chosen this moment to paint?
  • How would you compare the size of the figure of Pandora to the rest of the painting? Why might the artist have painted her so big? (Two answers may be: because she is the most important character in the story or because of the overwhelming consequences of her actions.)
  • The figure of Pandora is often shown with a box in her hand. What does this box symbolize? (It can symbolize different things, two of them being the evils of the world and temptations that we can’t resist because of curiosity.)
  • What object was painted almost in the center of the painting? (The box Pandora will open.) Why do you think the artist painted the box there? (The box is an important part of the story, and the artist wanted it to be one of the first things you see.) How does the artist use color to lead our eyes to the box? (While the rest of the painting has light, cheery, tranquil tones, the box is painted in contrasting dark browns and purples.)
  • What mystery about the world is explained by this story? (It explains how the troubles and woes of life—as well as hope—came to be.)
  • How was the world affected by the choices Pandora made? If you were Pandora, do you think you would make the same choice? Why or why not?

Activity

Students will design their own box to release an emotion of their choosing into the world:

  1. First, students should sketch symbols that represent their emotion. Remind them that color can be very important with this step.
  2. Next, they should chose which symbols should decorate the outside of their box in two-dimensions versus ones that might be better depicted in three-dimensions to be contained in the box. In deciding, they should ask themselves the questions: How can I design a box that would make someone curious enough to open it? How could these decorations on the outside foreshadow the inside contents?
  3. Once they have decided a schemata for the actual box, students can use paint, jewels, buttons, found objects, etc. to implement their designs.
  4. Then, using clay, students will craft objects to be contained in the box. (Remember that Prometheus modeled men out of clay in the likeness of gods!)
  5. Lastly, students will place their objects inside their box for the extension activity.

Extension

Each student will select one box that they are most curious about. Before they open it, they will write the emotion they think the box is trying to convey and what the contents inside may be. Then, open the boxes and see how close they came to guessing it right!

VA:Cr1.2.5Identify and demonstrate diverse methods of artistic investigation to choose an approach for beginning a work of art.

VA:Re7.1.5Compare one's own interpretation of a work of art with the interpretation of others.

VA:Re7.2.5Identify and analyze cultural associations suggested by visual imagery.

VA:Re8.1.5Interpret art by analyzing characteristics of form and structure, contextual information, subject matter, visual elements, and use of media to identify ideas and mood conveyed.

Pandora's Box (2024)

FAQs

Pandora's Box? ›

Pandora's box is a metaphor for something that brings about great troubles or misfortune, but also holds hope. In Greek mythology, Pandora's box was a gift from the gods to Pandora, the first woman on Earth. It contained all the evils of the world, which were released when Pandora opened the box.

What is the meaning behind Pandora's box? ›

The figure of Pandora is often shown with a box in her hand. What does this box symbolize? (It can symbolize different things, two of them being the evils of the world and temptations that we can't resist because of curiosity.)

What does it mean to open a Pandora's box? ›

phrase. If someone or something opens Pandora's box or opens a Pandora's box, they do something that causes a lot of problems to appear that did not exist or were not known about before. See full dictionary entry for Pandora. Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's Dictionary.

Why did hope stay in Pandora's box? ›

Walcot argues that the evils that escape from the jar only become evil upon their release, and that Hope's imprisonment allows humanity to use it for good or for evil (Walcot 1961).

What is the moral lesson of Pandora's Box? ›

The moral of Pandora's Box is that unchecked curiosity and disobedience can be dangerous, but hope remains. Although she is told not to open the box, Pandora does so because she is curious as to what is inside.

Is Pandora evil or good? ›

Pandora, a “dangerous” woman in ancient Greek mythology, was both a blessing and a curse. Created by the gods to serve humanity, Pandora ended up opening the box containing all evils, releasing them into the world. At first glance, the myth warns about the dangers of naivety and curiosity.

What is Pandora's symbol? ›

PANDORA SUMMARY
ParentsCrafted by the gods
HusbandEpimetheus
HomeThessaly
SymbolsPithos-jar

When you call someone a Pandora's box? ›

: a prolific source of troubles.

What is another way to say Pandora's box? ›

pandora-box (noun as in Pandora's box) Weak matches. can of worms confusion evil hornet's nest ill snake in the grass.

Is Pandora's box a gift or a curse? ›

Her name was Pandora, meaning all-gifted, implying all the gifts she had received from gods. Along with her, Hermes gave a gilded and intricately carved box, a gift from Zeus with an explicit warning that she must never open it, come what may.

Which god castrated his father? ›

Cronus. Cronus was the ruling Titan who came to power by castrating his Father Uranus.

What are the seven evils in Pandora's Box? ›

Firstly seven flatterers: the Genius of Honours, of Pleasures, Riches, Gaming (pack of cards in hand), Taste, Fashion (dressed as Harlequin) and False Knowledge. These are followed by seven bringers of evil: envy, remorse, avarice, poverty, scorn, ignorance and inconstancy.

What was the only thing left in Pandora box? ›

In Greek mythology, Pandora had a box filled with evils. She curiously open the box and all of the evils flew into the world. As the last evil was to fly out, she slammed the box shut and one evil remained—hope. The evil of hope remains inside us.

How does Pandora's box end? ›

Zeus sent her to Epimetheus, who forgot the warning of his brother Prometheus and made Pandora his wife. She afterward opened the jar, from which the evils flew out over the earth. Hope alone remained inside, the lid having been shut down before she could escape.

Is Pandora box real? ›

Is Pandora's Box real? It is, without doubt, one of the most famous myths in existence. But whether or not it's real we'll never know, unless the box itself is discovered! There have also been some details that have been lost in translation, such as whether the box was indeed a box or if it was a jar.

Why did Zeus give Pandora the box? ›

Even though Epimetheus' brother, Prometheus, had warned him of Zeus' trickery and told him not to accept gifts from the gods, Epimetheus was too taken with her beauty and wanted to marry her anyway. As a wedding present, Zeus gave Pandora a box (in ancient Greece this was called a jar) but warned her never to open it.

What is a modern example of Pandora's box? ›

For example, someone might say that the internet is a Pandora's box, because it has given people access to a lot of information and ideas, but it has also made it easier for people to spread misinformation and hate speech. The story of Pandora's box is one of the most lasting and well-known myths from Greek mythology.

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