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Oude vrouw op rug van triton naast hippocampus
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Oude vrouw op rug van triton naast hippocampus

Medium

engraving

Dimensions

h 102mm × w 117mm

Collection

Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Materials

paper

Object Type

print

Subject Matter

Furies, Dirae (Erinyes), Eumenides; 'Furie' (Ripa); triton(s); sea-horse, hippocamp, 'hippocampus', (horse/fish) (mythological hybrid monster)

Production Place

Italy

Acquisition Method

unknown

Acquired

2006

Notes

Oude vrouw, mogelijk een furie of wraakgodin, op rug van triton en daarnaast een hippocampus.

Collection Type

prints

About Jacopo de'Barbari

1450–1516Republic of Venice

Possibly born in Venice; died in Mechelen or Brussels before July 17, 1516. Barbari was the first Italian Renaissance artist of note to travel to the German and Netherlandish courts. He probably received training with Alvise Vivarini in Venice in the 1490s. His best-known painting is "Still Life with a Dead Partridge" of 1504, a a trompe l'oeil probably made for one of the palaces of the Saxon dukes; it is the earliest known independent still life painting of the Renaissance. Barbari signed nearly all his works with a caduceus. Barbari's idiosyncratic facial and figural types influenced contemporary masters such as Albrecht Dürer, Lucas Cranach the Elder, Albrecht Altdorfer, Hans von Kulmbach and Jan Gossart. Italian artist. Comment on works: religious, history, mythology