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Maker(s):Saenredam, Jan; Goltzius, Hendrik (after and published by)
Culture:Dutch (1565-1607); Dutch (1558-1617)
Title:Autumn from 'The Four Seasons'
Date Made:ca. 1595
Type:Print
Materials:engraving
Place Made:North Holland: Haarlem
Measurements:Sheet: 8 in x 5 11/16 in; 20.3 cm x 14.4 cm; Image: 7 5/8 in x 5 11/16 in; 19.4 cm x 14.4 cm
Accession Number:  AC 1971.5
Credit Line:Museum purchase
Museum Collection:  Mead Art Museum at Amherst College
1971-5.jpg

Description:
A women gathers fruit into a basket, while a man in costume attempts to sell wine to a potential customer.
“En ego maturos Autumnus profero fructus, | Efficioque mei ne sit spes vana coloni” (“Behold me, Autumn; I proffer ripe fruit and ensure that the husbandman does not hope in vain”). Latin text by Cornelis Schonaeus, the headmaster of the Haarlem Latin School.

Label Text:
Saenredam engraved "The Four Seasons" print series after designs by his teacher, Hendrik Goltzius. It was Goltzius’ third effort to tackle the popular subject, merging classical iconography with genre style depictions of seasonal activities of people in ordinary surroundings. Spring features a fashionably dressed young couple, completely absorbed in each other’s amorous stare as a cupid hovers in the lush canopy above. In Summer, the god Apollo embodies the transit of the sun and the daily labors of the season. Goltzius inserts Bacchus into his produce-laden autumn market scene. The virtuoso rendering of the fourth composition demonstrates the breadth of Goltzius’ repurposing of concepts from earlier masters. For wintertime, typically associated with feasting and revelry, the artist inserts three personifications: Winter as Aeolus, the god of winds; Comus, the Greek god of festivity; and again Bacchus, the Roman god of agriculture. The Latin text summarizes the eclectic visuals: "All that you see gathered throughout the year provides us with rich fare in the season of icy cold."
MH, 2018

Subjects:
Engraving

Link to share this object record:
https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=AC+1971.5

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