HENDRICK GOLTZIUS (1558-1617)
THE SAM JOSEFOWITZ COLLECTION: A LIFETIME OF DISCOVERY AND SCHOLARSHIP
HENDRICK GOLTZIUS (1558-1617)

Pietà

Details
HENDRICK GOLTZIUS (1558-1617)
Pietà
engraving
1596
on laid paper, watermark Strasbourg Lily
a very good, luminous impression of the second, final state
printing sharply and with good contrasts
with margins
generally in very good condition
Plate 187 x 128 mm.
Sheet 200 x 141 mm.
Provenance
Sam Josefowitz (1921-2015), Lithuania, Switzerland, USA and England (Lugt 6094); then by descent to the present owners.
Literature
Bartsch 41; Hollstein 50; Strauss 331; New Hollstein 31

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Stefano Franceschi
Stefano Franceschi Specialist

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Lot Essay

Goltzius's virtuosity and mastery of the engraving technique places him amongst the greatest printmakers of all time. As the leading exponent of late 16th century Mannerism, his printed oeuvre is however firmly rooted in the Renaissance tradition. His admiration of previous masters is immortalized in the Pietà, one the the peaks of his artistic development. As suggested by Huigen Leeflang, the likeness of Christ's body nestled on his weeping mother's lap recalls Michelangelo's famous marble sculpture in St. Peter's Basilica, which Goltzius had seen - and probably drawn - during his Roman sojourn in 1590. At the same time, as pointed out by Bartsch and before him, as early as 1604, by the painter and art historian Karel van Mander, the engraving undoubtedly pays homage to Albrecht Dürer, Goltzius' great predecessor. He adapted several elements of The Virgin with the Swaddled Child of 1520 (see lot 29) for this composition. Just like Dürer draws attention to the Virgin's holiness by rendering her halo as a white orb that radiates light over the earth, so does Goltzius, in reverse. He further heightens the contrasts between the light radiating from the heads of the sorrowful mother and the dead Christ and the dark backdrop with Golgotha in the distance. Dürer's Christ child, tightly wrapped, somewhat stiff and with His eyes closed, foretells the sorrowful end depicted by Goltzius.

(See H. Leeflang, G. Luijten, Hendrick Goltzius (1558-1617): Drawings, Prints and Paintings, 2003, no. 81, p. 226-227.)

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