The Davis Museum recently acquired The
Life of the Virgin series
by the Dutch artist Hendrik Goltzius, six engravings executed
in the 1590s by one of the most brilliant and influential artists
in the history of printmaking. In these engravings, often called
his “Master Works,” Goltzius created new compositions
based on the style and technique of earlier artists such as
Albrecht Dürer, Lucas van Leyden, Parmigianino, and Frederico
Barrocci. Each image is a bravura performance, emblematic of
Goltzius’s skills of invention and emulation in particular
and of the complexity of Mannerist art in general.
The acquisition of The Life of the Virgin series by
Goltzius offered the occasion to highlight aspects of Mannerist
art from
the Davis Museum’s permanent collections, and to consider
the legacy of the contested definitions of Mannerism and maniera
within the realm of art history. The thirty prints, paintings
and sculpture in the exhibition illustrated the range and variety
of 16th-century art in northern and southern Europe. They included
Giorgio Vasari’s Holy Family, Giovanni Bologna’s
Rape of a Sabine, and Ugo da Carpi’s Diogenes,
as well as two other major recent Goltzius acquisitions, Proserpina,
and Venus and Mars Surprised by Vulcan, and was
supplemented by loans from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
and The Fogg
Museum of Harvard University.
Funded by Wellesley College Friends of Art, the Constance
Rhind ’81 Fund for Museum Exhibitions and the June
Feinberg Stayman ’48 Art Fund.
|