According to the Bible, Salome is the daughter of Herodias and the stepdaughter of Herod, ruler of Galilee.

Prompted by her mother, Salome danced before Herod and his guests and in return, asks for the head of John the Baptist.

In the biblical depictions of Salome, she is unnamed and presented as an innocent victim, caught up in her mother’s revenge against John the Baptist.

This version of Salome is not the one we now know, and certainly not the one to be portrayed by artists for years to come.

The dramatic and violent story has proved a popular source of inspiration since the early periods of Christian art.

Depictions of the fateful tale were especially popular in the Renaissance period (1300 – 1600), and the nineteenth century, thanks to literature such as Oscar Wilde’s Salomé. By this point, Salome was no longer an unwitting victim, but a femme fatale.

In 2018 Salome’s story was told once again by ENO, this time in Adena Jacobs’s brand new production of Strauss’s opera.

We’ve taken a look at 4 different ways the Salome story has inspired different art forms; opera, literature, art and poetry.