ca. 1950 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
In this six plate series after Adriaen Collaert, seven figures from the episode of the Judgement of Paris are represented. The three contestants for Paris’ apple, Juno, Minerva and Venus, are each accompanied by an identifying attribute. Minerva is armed and holds a shield with the Gorgon’s head, Juno carries a sceptre and is accompanied by a peacock, and Venus, the winner, holds the apple in one hand while leading Cupid, the god of desire, with the other. Paris holds his shepherd’s staff under a tree, extending the apple towards the victor. Two other figures, Mercury and an older male figure, possibly Neptune as a river god, are not central to the narrative, but by incorporating them, Collaert shows his mastery as a draughtsman by presenting the nude forms in a variety of postures. Especially in the figures of Paris and the river god, it is possible that Collaert was looking to Marcantonio Raimondi’s Judgement of Paris after Raphael, an engraving from the 1510’s. In the Collaert series, each medallion is set in a dark field a decorated with intricate grotesques, sometimes relating to the central figure. Given the close association of grotesques with Roman wall decoration in the 16th and 17th centuries and the Classical theme of the central figures, the series displays a deep interest in emulating antique decorative art.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Engraving |
Brief description | Adriaen Collaert (designed and executed), 1 from a suite of 6 ornamental designs with the Judgement of Paris. Published in Antwerp |
Physical description | circular medallion on a black ground decorated with grotesques |
Dimensions |
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Content description | Mercury is running, holding his caduces, and is nude except for his winged helmet and a drape down his back. In either lower corner is a snail and flanking the medallion are two bundles of weaponry. Above the medallion are two cornucopias. |
Marks and inscriptions | "Adrian Collaert invent. sculp. & excudit." (inscription cut off when print was cut down ) |
Subjects depicted | |
Summary | In this six plate series after Adriaen Collaert, seven figures from the episode of the Judgement of Paris are represented. The three contestants for Paris’ apple, Juno, Minerva and Venus, are each accompanied by an identifying attribute. Minerva is armed and holds a shield with the Gorgon’s head, Juno carries a sceptre and is accompanied by a peacock, and Venus, the winner, holds the apple in one hand while leading Cupid, the god of desire, with the other. Paris holds his shepherd’s staff under a tree, extending the apple towards the victor. Two other figures, Mercury and an older male figure, possibly Neptune as a river god, are not central to the narrative, but by incorporating them, Collaert shows his mastery as a draughtsman by presenting the nude forms in a variety of postures. Especially in the figures of Paris and the river god, it is possible that Collaert was looking to Marcantonio Raimondi’s Judgement of Paris after Raphael, an engraving from the 1510’s. In the Collaert series, each medallion is set in a dark field a decorated with intricate grotesques, sometimes relating to the central figure. Given the close association of grotesques with Roman wall decoration in the 16th and 17th centuries and the Classical theme of the central figures, the series displays a deep interest in emulating antique decorative art. |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | E.2440-1912 |
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Record created | April 26, 2005 |
Record URL |
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