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Spaightwood Galleries
120 Main Street, Upton MA 01568-6193; 800-809-3343
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Before the Reformation, the subjects most likely to be depicted in religious art included images of the Virgin Mary (over one third of Italian churches at the end of the 15th century had at least one image of the Virgin and child with or without saintly companions), devotional images of saints commissioned for altar pieces, devotional works for side chapels in churches, events from the life of Jesus, specific local miracles, and images from the Old Testament beginning with Adam and Eve's fall in the Garden of Eden. With the explosive growth in the production of prints, opportunities to create images abounded and the audience for them multiplied: now even those much lower down on the financial tree could own their own art and with the Reformation, doctrinal issues seem to have become central for many commissioning and publishing prints. Prints could depict individuals who were either positive or negative examples and prints could depict biblical histories by showing cycles devoted to significant biblical events like creation, temptation, fall, the life of fallen man, heroes and heroines of the Old and New Testaments, and subjects from the life of Christ, usually focusing on his miracles or his sufferings, and images showing the acts and sufferings of the faithful. In the North, the center of artistic activity in the early part of the century was focused in Nuremberg, where Albrecht Durer and the artists he influenced (like Hans Sebald Beham, Heinrich Aldegrever, Georg Pencz, Daniel and Hieronymous Hopfer, and others) worked and in the Netherlands, where Lucas van Leyden's works were a starting point for those who came after. As Netherlandish artists started traveling to Italy and returning with a whole new set of ideas about how prints ought to look and work, Mannerism based upon Italian models (especially Raphael, Michelangelo, and Titian) but drawing as well upon the works of Durer and Lucas became the dominant style and the lands that would become Belgium and Holland became the center of the print world. During the mid to late 16th century and the fiirst part of the 17th century, artists and print publishers located in Antwerp (like Cornelis Cort, Jan Sadeler, Phillip Galle, the Wierix brothers, the Collaert brothers) or, after the fall of Antwerp to the Spanish, in other Dutch cities (including artists like Hendrick Goltzius or Rembrandt) produced large bodies of work published in books, in portfolios, and as single sheets for large publishers like Hieronymous Cock or the Plantin-Moretus publishing dynasty. Wiithin this large body of images, we have chosen to present several groups as identified above and several overviews. The two sets of prints depicting the heroines of the Old Testament and of the New by Adrien and Hans Collaert and by Carel de Mallery after drawings by Maerten de Vos (see links above) provide an easy introduction to the question of the role of individuals in 16th- and early 17th-century art; the links to specirfic individuals like Adam and Eve, Lot and his daughters, Samson and Delilah, Judith, Susanna, Jephthah and his Daughter, the Virgin, and Mary Magdalene among others provide extended glimpses of some different kinds of presentations of these key figures suggesting that Renaissance artists and viewers may have been both more complex and more spohisticated in their presentations than they have recently been given credit.
Select Bibliography: W. Th. Kloek et al, Northern Netherlandish Art 1525-1580: Art Before the Iconoclasm (Amsterdam: Rijksmuseum, 1986); H. Diane Russell, Eva / Ave: Women in Renaissance and Baroque Prints (Washington DC: The National Gallery of Art, 1990); Ellen Schultz, ed. Gothic and Renaissance Art in Nuremberg 13000-1550 (NY: Metroplitan Museum of Art, 1986).
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Jan Sadeler (Antwerp, 1550-1600), Creation of the other animal and of man (TIB 7001: 015 i/ii). Engraving after Maarten de Vos, c. 1586. A very good impression on laid paper trimmed on or within the plate mark. Inscribed on the plate: "Genes. cap. j" (bottom left); "M. de Vos figur, I. Sadeler scalpt, excu" (bottom right ), "VI" (upper center). Published in Imago Bonitatis Illivs (1584). The engraving is actually a rectangle; the sides lifted up while I was photographing it. The creation of Eve is shown Image size: 191x252mm. Price: $1750.
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Jan Sadeler (Antwerp, 1550-1600), The Fall (TIB 7001: 006 ii/iii). Engraving after Crispin van den Broeck, 1585. A very good impression on laid paper with margins. Inscribed on the plate: "Crispin JV" (lower center right); "6" (lower right center); "JSaeyler . f " (lower right); "Genes C. 3 V. g" (in inscription area). The first edition (TIB 7001: 006 ii/ii) from which this image comes was published by Gerard de Jode in the Thesaurus Sacrum Historian Veteris Testamenti / The Sacred History of the Old Testament (Antwerp, 1583); the second edition replaced the images of God the Father with the Tetragrammaton and inscriptions; it was published in the Theatrum Biblicum / The Theatre of the Bible published by Claes Jan Visscher (Amsterdam, 1643). Image size: 201x247mm. Price: $1750.
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Bernaert van Orley (Netherlandish, 1492-1542)), Susannah and the elders. Pen and sepia ink drawing on laid paper without a watermark, c. 1530. Image size: 115x82mm. Price: $12,500.
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Hans I Collaert (Brussels, c. 1525/30-1580, Antwerp), The Story of Susanna (4 plates) published by Gerard de Jode (Dutch, 1509-1591), 1579. Engravings after Gillis Coignet. Plate 1 inscribed "G. de Jode excud"; plate 4 signed lower left with the artists monogram "HCF" (Hans Collaert fecit). Plate 1: Susanna and the Elders (Eva/Ave, fig. 19a; New Hollstein 74 i/iii). A very good impression of the first state of three trimmed on or within the platemark. For discussion of the theme and an illustration of this print, see Eva/Ave: Images of Women in Renaissance Prints (National Gallery of Art, 1990). Image size: 200x261mm. Price: SOLD.
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Phillip Galle (Antwerp, 1537-1612), Samson and Delila (Hol. 228). Engraving after Marten van Heemskerck, c. 1569. Plate 5 from The Story of Samson published in Antwerp by Theodor Galle (Dutch, 1509-1591). Very good impression on laid paper. "Martinus heemskerck inuentor. Phillipus galle fecit. Theodor Galle excudidt." Image size: 258mm diameter. Price: sold only as part of a complete set of six (see Samson).
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Phillip Galle (Antwerp, 1537-1612), Samson pulling down the pillars (Hol. 229). Engraving after Marten van Heemskerck, c. 1569. Plate 5 from The Story of Samson published in Antwerp by Theodor Galle ((Dutch, 1571-1633). Very good impression on laid paper. "Martinus heemskerck inuentor. Phillipus galle fecit. Theodor Galle excudidt." Image size: 258mm diameter. Price: sold only as part of a complete set of six (see Samson).
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Georg Pencz (German, 1500-1550), Georg Pencz (German, 1500-1550), Christ and the Adulterous Woman (Bartsch 55). Original engraving, c. 1532. A good impression on laid paper cut on or within the platemark. Titled in the plate. Image size: 46x74mm. Price: $1950.
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The Lamentation (B. 13, M. 122b, S. 60). Original woodcut, 1498-99. Executed in the late fifteenth century for the Large Passion, our impression is a post-1511 Latin edition Meder b, before the left border sprouted many breaks. Our impression is mounted on an archival suport sheet to strenthen the folds. Repaired tears at margins. The long vertical crack on the left dates from 1511. Image size: 392x283mm. Price: $7500.
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Phillip Galle (Antwerp, 1537-1612), Pentecost (Hol. 209) . Engraving after Johan Stradanus. Plate 3 from The Acts of the Apostles published in Antwerp by Nicholas Visscher (Amsterdam, 1587-1660). Very good impression on laid paper with large margins. Image size: 201x265mm. Price: $950.
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Gerard de Jode (Dutch, 1509-1591), Female Angel separating the sheep from the goats at the Last Judgment. Engraving after Maerten de Vos, c. 1570. Good impression on laid paper trimmed on or within the margins. Image size: 210x242mm. Price: $1000.
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Spaightwood Galleries, Inc.
To purchase, call us at 1-800-809-3343 (508-529-2511 in Upton MA & vicinity) or send an email to sptwd@verizon.net. We accept AmericanExpress, DiscoverCard, MasterCard, and Visa.
For directions and visiting information, please call. We are, of course, always available over the web and by telephone (see above for contact information). Click the following for links to past shows and artists. For a visual tour of the gallery, please click here. For information about Andy Weiner and Sonja Hansard-Weiner, please click here. For a list of special offers currently available, see Specials.
Visiting hours: Noon to six Saturdays and Sundays; other times by arrangement.
Please call to confirm your visit. Browsers and guests are welcome.
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