Joannes Galle (aka Johannes Galle; Jan Galle) (1600–76),
“Euterpe”, 17th
century, the fourth plate in a series depicting the Muses after Maerten de Vos (aka Marten de Vos) (1532–1603)
Engraving on
heavy laid paper with thread margins
Size: (sheet)
16.6 x 9.5 cm; (plate) 16.3 x 9.2 cm; (image borderline) 15 x 9.1 cm
Inscribed
within the image borderline at lower left: “Marti de Vos inu[v]vent. / Joan
Gall excudit. / 4.”
Lettered below
the image borderline: (centre) EV[U]TERPE. / Dulciloguis calmos EV[U]TERPE
flatibus V[u]rget”
Nicholas S
Lander offers the following insightful description of this print:
“The fourth
engraving in a series depicting the Muses. Euterpe (Muse of music and lyric
poetry) sits playing a straight trumpet held in her right hand. In her left
hand she holds a cylindrical recorder with a greatly flared bell; the beak,
window/labium and four lowermost holes (in line) are clearly visible. Beneath
the recorder stands a case, a set of tubes for five wind instruments. At her
feet lie a folded trumpet, a crumhorn without a windcap, a cornetto, a set of
small bagpipes and a flute. To her right and in the distance four other female
figures play bagpipes, flute, straight trumpet and a crumhorn (again without a
windcap). Just below the recorder is a case for five flutes.” (http://www.recorderhomepage.net/recorder-iconography/artists-v/)
Hollstein
(1949-, XLVI: 167, no. 1301); Musiek & Grafiek, Antwerp (1994: 5, fig. 3d);
Paris RIdIM (2000); Rasmussen (2002, Bagpipe; 2007, Flute).
Condition: strong
and well-printed impression with tread margins. The sheet has aged to a mellow yellow
and there are remnants of mounting hinges (verso) and a faint stain at the top
left corner (recto).
I am selling
this rare early engraving of the muse of music portrayed with around a dozen
musical instruments, including an early bagpipe in the foreground
and—extraordinarily—a woman playing one in the distance, for the total cost of
AU$142 (currently US$102.32/EUR97.89/GBP83.28 at the time of this listing)
including postage and handling to anywhere in the world.
If you are
interested in purchasing this rare and historically significant print showing a
large collection of early musical instruments, please contact me
(oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you a PayPal invoice to make
the payment easy.
This print has been sold
This image of
the muse, Euterpe (the daughter of Zeus and Mnemosyne), leaves no doubt that she
is in charge of music in the sense that I counted no fewer than twelve musical
instruments surrounding her. Sadly, lyric poetry that should have been another
of Euterpe’s symbolic attributes is strangely missing.
Like many early
17th century images this print has the usual trappings of mannerism;
for example, note how Euterpe’s left arm is almost detached from her shoulder
and how delicately small her neck seems. What I find very interesting about the
manneristic swirl to Euterpe’s gown is how well it helps to project the notion
of sound of the straight trumpet that she blows.
Regarding the
musical instruments surrounding her, my eye is drawn to the bagpipe
shown in the foreground—curiously still inflated. Of course, bagpipes were not invented
by the Scots and so to see one here is not an issue. The development of this
instrument involved a much wider spread of countries from Africa to the Balkans
and beyond. I should also mention that this beautiful engraving with its
featured bagpipe is not the first print to depict this instrument. One of the
most famous representations of a bagpipe is Durer’s engraving, “The Bagpiper” (1514),
but, for me, what makes this scene with the bagpipe so special and perhaps
unique is that it shows in the distance a lady playing one.
Perhaps I
should not be surprised, as I fully appreciate that there are no physical impediments
to a woman playing a bagpipe, but from my understanding of the use of bagpipes in
the early days is that it carried with it notions of bawdiness—the bawdiness of
Chaucer’s “The Canterbury Tales”. Perhaps more disturbing, is that this
instrument carried with it symbolic notions of the male genitalia. I should hasten
to add, however, that this symbolism was usually reserved for still life
arrangements featuring a bagpipe placed beside a vase—the vase in this setting
symbolised feminine charm.
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