Artwork Page for The Great Lion

Details / Information for The Great Lion

The Great Lion

1590
(Netherlandish, 1565–1629)
publisher
Medium
engraving
Measurements
Image: 25.4 x 33 cm (10 x 13 in.)
State
I/II
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view
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Did You Know?

In preparation for creating this engraving, the artist observed and sketched an actual lion, likely one brought to the Netherlands by the Dutch East India Company and exhibited in a menagerie or zoo in The Hague.

Description

Created during the Eighty Years’ War, De Gheyn’s Great Lion blends political allegory with naturalistic observation. The lion symbolizes the Dutch Republic’s bravery in its fight for independence from Spain, while the Latin inscription praises the lion’s—and by extension, the young Dutch Republic’s—vigilance and courage. De Gheyn, who also served in a local militia and produced an important military manual for the Dutch stadtholder, depicts the scene with detailed accuracy, from the texture of the lion’s fur to the carefully observed skull, which may reflect his attendance at dissections at Leiden’s anatomy theater.
A vertically oriented engraving in black ink depicts a lion resting on a rocky ledge within a circular border of Latin text. Facing right with a textured mane and tail curling left, the lion lies above a human skull in the foreground. To the right, tall flora grows from the stone, while wispy clouds fill the sky. Fine, curved lines and hatching define the forms against the light, rectangular paper.

The Great Lion

1590

Jacob de Gheyn II, Joos de Bosscher

(Netherlandish, 1565–1629)
Netherlands

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