Allegory of Europe, from the Four Continents ca. 1590–1600 After Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder Flemish Marcus Gheeraerts likely trained with the Brussels painter Bernard van Orley; and, after his death, in Antwerp with the prolific printmaker and publisher Hieronymus Cock. Gheeraerts produced his own etchings as well as hundreds of drawings for engravings, which were executed by some of the most well-known Flemish artists of the time. His connections to these printers and publishing houses—Cock, Sadeler, Galle, de Jode—remained strong even while he was working in exile in Allegory of


Allegory of Europe, from the Four Continents ca. 1590–1600 After Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder Flemish Marcus Gheeraerts likely trained with the Brussels painter Bernard van Orley; and, after his death, in Antwerp with the prolific printmaker and publisher Hieronymus Cock. Gheeraerts produced his own etchings as well as hundreds of drawings for engravings, which were executed by some of the most well-known Flemish artists of the time. His connections to these printers and publishing houses—Cock, Sadeler, Galle, de Jode—remained strong even while he was working in exile in Allegory of Europe is part of a series of engravings of the four continents after drawings by Gheeraerts. European artists from the Renaissance onwards represented the known world through allegorical figures derived from antiquity. They often took the form of clothed or naked women and were used in ephemeral works made for triumphal entries and pageants, in maps, coins, prints, and the decorative arts. The representations were eventually standardized in the Iconologia by the Italian Cesare Ripa (1593; illustrated in 1603), and supplemented by contemporary travel accounts. In his representations of the Continents, Gheeraerts surrounded the allegories -- sexualized young women -- with the symbols and attributes that the artists and the viewers associated with each continent—in some cases the commodities to be traded and resources to be exploited. These images, steeped in a white Christian and male Eurocentrism, reinforced ideas of the self and the other that characterized the this engraving, Europe is shown dressed as a queen wearing a crown and carrying a scepter and orb of the world. She is placed beneath a cloth of honor and framed by two fashionably dressed soldiers. Beside her are panoplies of arms–likely the spoils of war—and animals long associated with the continent: a fierce bear, a noble horse, and the eagle of empire. Gheeraerts’s Allegory of Europe also demo


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