Hieronymus Wierix (aka Hieronymus
Wierx; Jerome Wierix) (1553–1619)
“Allegory of the mercy of Christ” (aka “Allegorie
op de barmhartigheid van Christus”; “Misericordiarum domini effigies” [title on
plate]; “Images of kindness”), 1581, published by Theodoor Galle (aka Dirck
Galle; Theodor Galle) (1571–1633).
Note: This is the second impression of
this print that I am listing. The earlier listing (2017) of the print has been
sold (see http://www.printsandprinciples.com/2017/08/hieronymus-wierixs-engraving-allegory.html).
Engraving on laid paper with uneven
margins around the platemark and backed with a support sheet.
Size: (sheet) 40.3 x 29.6 cm; (plate)
34.5 x 27 cm; (image borderline) 31.8 x 26.8 cm.
Lettered on plate above the image
borderline: “MISERICORDIARVM DOMINI EFFIGIES”.
Inscribed on plate within the image
borderline: (lower left upon a stone) “Jeroninmus. Wi. / fecit. 1581.”;
(centre) “Theodor. Galle excud.”
Lettered on plate below the image
borderline in two columns of three lines: “[E]n Deus ad veniam pronus …/ …/ …//
…/ …/ … in imagine serunt”.
State i/ii (of ii) Note that this
impression shows the erasure of the previous publisher’s name (Hans Liefrinck)
below the image borderline and substitution with “Theodor. Galle excud.” within
the image borderline of the second state. There is an inconsistency with the
second state attributes as the date (1581) shown below the artist name is still
retained as featured in first state impressions before the erasure of the date
in the second state. Clearly there should be three states but this is not
documented in the catalogue raisonnés of Hollstein or Mauquoy-Hendrickx.
Hollstein Dutch 1822-2(2); Mauquoy-Hendrickx
595 I-II (of II) (Marie Mauquoy-Hendrickx 1978, “Les Estampes des Wierix ... Catalogue
Raisonné I, 4 vols., Brussels, Bibliotheque Royale Albert, p. 105. cat. no.
595, ill. p. 79).
The Rijksmuseum offers the following
description of this print:
(transl.) “The merciful Christ,
surrounded by symbols of the four evangelists, extends his hands to the
publican and Mary Magdalene. Above them in heaven the Holy Spirit as a dove,
surrounded by music-making angels and Saint Peter (left on the clouds). On the
left in the background the parable of the Pharisee and the publican. And further
into the background the crucified Christ, flanked by the two criminals. In the
background to the right, Mary Magdalene washes the feet of Christ in the house
of Simon the Pharisee. In the margin a six-line caption, in two columns, in
Latin.”
Condition: crisp but slightly grey
impression trimmed close to the platemark on the left and with generous margins
(from 2.5 to 3.2 cm) on the remaining sides and backed with a support of
archival (millennium quality) washi paper. There are small areas of minor
abrasion on the lower left side, otherwise the sheet is in a remarkably fine
condition for its considerable age (i.e. there are no tears, holes, folds, significant
stains or foxing).
I am selling this of magnificent large masterwork
of engraving—executed by one of the major printmakers of the Renaissance era
and a print that is so rare that neither the British Museum nor the
Metropolitan Museum of Art have a copy—for the total cost of AU$510 (currently
US$364.08/EUR323.56/GBP280.35 at the time of this listing) including postage
and handling to anywhere in the world (but not, of course, any import
duties/taxes imposed by some countries).
If you are interested in purchasing this
very beautiful print of exceptional rarity, please contact me
(oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you a PayPal invoice to make
the payment easy.
When I was looking at my earlier post of
another impression of this print—now sold—I decided to share what I
originally wrote regarding my challenge as an atheist to decipher the symbolic
meanings of the print. For example, I was slow to realise that the cow that
Christ stands upon was not a reference to his birth in a manger—a cow’s feeding
trough. Instead the cow is a symbolic attribute of Saint Luke, but this
realisation only occurred once I had pieced together the idea that the
combination of the three animals surrounding Christ (viz. cow, lion and eagle)
and the angel on his left were actually the symbolic attributes of the four
evangelists: Mathew, Mark, Luke and John. Moreover that my initial quandary
over the awkwardness of the Christ shown raising his left foot rather than his
right one—a pose that right-handers like myself find very unnerving to look
at—was nothing at all about physical movement but rather about spiritual
transcendence to a heavenly realm filled with adoring fat folk.
To be honest, however, I had to do a
quick Google to find the significance of Christ shown with a square halo rather
than a round one. The reason is surprisingly simple: the square halo symbolises
that Christ is still in the temporal world and the shape of the halo will
change to a round one once he transcends the world of the mortals.
Regarding this notion of spiritual
transcendence, note how Christ’s arms are arranged to suggest an arrowhead and
how the leaning pose of St John and the Virgin extend the angle of this
arrowhead pointed to heaven.
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