Circle of Joris Hoefnagel (Antwerp 1542-1601 Vienna)
Circle of Joris Hoefnagel (Antwerp 1542-1601 Vienna)

Elegantly dressed figures merrymaking in a garden

细节
Circle of Joris Hoefnagel (Antwerp 1542-1601 Vienna)
Elegantly dressed figures merrymaking in a garden
inscribed 'INVIDIA EST MAIA RES IPSI SIRI PESSIMA ET ISTA NON CARET HVMANVM PINNIGERVMQS genus' (lower centre)
oil on canvas
45 5/8 x 59¼ in. (115.9 x 150.5 cm.)

荣誉呈献

Alexis Ashot
Alexis Ashot

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拍品专文

Invidia (the snake-eating woman) is devoured with envy at the sight of the lovers enjoying themselves, while the Latin inscription translates: 'Envy is an evil thing, execrable in and of itself, and neither the human race nor birds lack it'. Owls, which feature strongly in the foreground frieze of birds, were commonly used as symbols of foolishness and stupidity. Jan de Brune in his Bankketwerk van goede gedachten (Banquet of good thoughts, Middelburg, 1657) under thought CCLXXXIV - Envy, writes:

'De nijd maeckt ons, als een ellendigen nacht-uyl, die den dagh van eens anders gheluck niet en kan verdraghen...'

(Envy makes us like a miserable night owl, who cannot abide the day of others' good fortune...)

We are grateful to Paul Taylor, of the Warburg Institute, for his thoughts on the subject of this picture.