woman wearing a headdress with two towers, measuring with a calipers on a globe; frog and snake in front of globe; text at bottom

Geometria, from "The Liberal Arts", late 16th century

Not on Viewexpand_more

This is an allegory, a symbolic picture intended to convey abstract ideas. The woman represents geometry. Her crown, which has the form of a fortres castle, reminds us of the usefulness of geometry in the practice of architecture, including for fortifications. Besides keeping a place safe, it is the geometry of navigation that allows trvel around the Earth, as indicated by her measurement of a globe using a pair of dividers. Instruments for drafting, navigation, and surveying (compass, right angle, ruler, yardstick, etc.) litter the room. What are the snake and toad doing here'

      The woman wears clothing meant to recall classical antiquity, because Geomerty is one of the Seven Liberal Arts outlined by the Roman philosopher Cicero in the fist century BCE, but based on still earlier tradition. This engraving comes from a series meant to depict the arts: grammar, dialectics, rhetoric, arithmetic, astronomy, geometry, and music. Such didactic series poured from the printing presses of 16th-century Antwerp and then many other European capitals when the Dutch revolt upended Antwerp's economy in the 1580s. It is difficult to say where the Jan Sadeler made this print because he worked in Antwerp, Cologne, Mainz, Frankfurt, Munich, Verona, and Venice! Maerten de Vos, designer of the images, was a leading artist in Antwerp. In addition to providing designs for some 1600 prints, he gained major commisions to paint replacements for the many pictures destroyed during Protestant uprisings.
Details
Title
Geometria, from "The Liberal Arts"
Artist Life
1550 - 1600
Role
Artist
Accession Number
2021.69.5.5
Catalogue Raisonne
Hollstein 550
Curator Approved

This record is from historic documentation and may not have been reviewed by a curator, so may be inaccurate or incomplete. Our records are frequently revised and enhanced. If you notice a mistake or have additional information about this object, please email collectionsdata@artsmia.org.

Does something look wrong with this image? Let us know

Zoom in on the left to the detail you'd like to save. Click 'Save detail' and wait until the image updates. Right click the image to 'save image as' or copy link, or click the image to open in a new tab.

woman wearing a headdress with two towers, measuring with a calipers on a globe; frog and snake in front of globe; text at bottom