Allegory of Europe, from the Four Continents
Godfried Maes, 17th century
About this artwork
Behold *Allegory of Europe, from the Four Continents*, a delicate 17th-century drawing Flemish artist Godfried Maes. This sheet captures the personification of Europe amidst symbolic figures, including women, children, and horses—evocative motifs that likely evoke imperial grandeur and classical mythology. As part of a series representing the four continents, it reflects the era's fascination with global exploration and the expanding world map, a theme popular in Baroque art across Europe. Crafted in pen and gray ink with brush and gray wash on modest 10 3/4 x 8 1/4-inch sheet, Maes employs fluid lines and subtle tonal washes to create depth and movement. This monochromatic technique, common in preparatory drawings, allowed artists like Maes to study compositions for larger paintings or tapestries, highlighting the preparatory brilliance of 17th-century draftsmen. Housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Drawings and Prints department (gift of the Estate of James Hazen Hyde, 1959), this work offers a window into Baroque allegory's cultural role: celebrating Europe's dominance while blending humanism and symbolism. A charming glimpse into an age of discovery!