A second set of most skilled designs for pendants and earrings
Print
1582
1582
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
After Hans Collaert’s death in October of 1580, his sons and his publisher, Philips Galle, produced two more sets of engravings after his designs for jewellery. This is the second one, published in 1582, and is comprised of ten prints including the title page. Though it represents the last of Hans’ publications, it is also the first dated plates engraved by his son Adriaen, who would continue to an illustrious engraving and publishing career of his own. Each image shows a pendant in the shape of a sea creature and topped with humans, dieties or merpeople. The pendants dangle from delicate ribbon work and are each hung with three pearls. It is possible that the bodies of the sea creatures themselveves were made out of baroque pearls. Baroque pearls were famous for their irregular shapes and were prized in the early modern world as the basis for elaborate jewellery designs such as the ones seen in the Collaert series.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Title | A second set of most skilled designs for pendants and earrings (series title) |
Materials and techniques | engraving |
Brief description | Hans Collaert (after), plate from a suite of ten, including title plate, showing jewellery in the shape of sea creatures. Flemish, 1582. |
Physical description | An ornamental design for a pendant in the shape of a winged sea monster with a sea god sitting on a shell on his back holding a trident, and behind him a nude male figure with an oar. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions | "10" (lower left corner, possibly written in ink ) |
Object history | For an example of a baroque pearl pendant contemporary to these designs, see M537-1910 in the V&A collection. For an example of a sea-creature pendant similar and contemporary to this design, see 44.443 in the Walter’s Art Museum collection. Collection number 12828.4 in the V&A collection is a duplicate of this print. (F. Allitt) |
Subjects depicted | |
Summary | After Hans Collaert’s death in October of 1580, his sons and his publisher, Philips Galle, produced two more sets of engravings after his designs for jewellery. This is the second one, published in 1582, and is comprised of ten prints including the title page. Though it represents the last of Hans’ publications, it is also the first dated plates engraved by his son Adriaen, who would continue to an illustrious engraving and publishing career of his own. Each image shows a pendant in the shape of a sea creature and topped with humans, dieties or merpeople. The pendants dangle from delicate ribbon work and are each hung with three pearls. It is possible that the bodies of the sea creatures themselveves were made out of baroque pearls. Baroque pearls were famous for their irregular shapes and were prized in the early modern world as the basis for elaborate jewellery designs such as the ones seen in the Collaert series. |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | E.2212-1911 |
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Record created | June 30, 2009 |
Record URL |
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