Currently not on view

Allegory of Life,

1561

Giorgio Ghisi, Italian, 1520–1582
x1984-329
Darkness dominates this dense and mysterious engraving by the virtuoso Italian printmaker Giorgio Ghisi, who spent half of his career in Antwerp and France. While the scene’s precise meaning remains elusive, the subject is thought to be an allegory about the adversities of life, as experienced by the bearded old man leaning against a blasted tree. Marooned on a rocky promontory and surrounded by various creatures, including the nocturnal owl and bat, he reaches imploringly toward a crowned woman, perhaps representing wisdom or reason, who strides in from the lower right. The symbolic passage from the darkness of despair to light-filled optimism is signified in the upper portion of the print, by the crescent moon on the left and the rising sun on the right, with a rainbow and stormy weather between them.

Information

Title
Allegory of Life
Dates

1561

Medium
Engraving
Dimensions
plate (sheet trimmed to plate): 38 × 54 cm (14 15/16 × 21 1/4 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, by exchange, Caroline G. Mather Fund
Object Number
x1984-329
Place Made

Europe, Italy, Mantua

Inscription
Inscribed in plate on tablet, center: SEDET ALTERNVM / QVE SEDEBIT I FOELIX Signed in plate on plaque in boat, center: Ghisi / Mat F / 1561 Inscribed in plate on tablet, lower left corner: RAPHAELIS VRBINATIS INVENTVM. / PHILIPPVS DATVS ANIMI GRATIA / FIERS IVSSIT. Inscribed in plate on tablet, lower right: TV NE CEDE MALIS: SEB / COTRA AVDENTIOR ITO
Reference Numbers
Bartsch 412.67; Lewis 28
Culture
Materials