Judas Iscariot, after Abraham Bloemaert

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Willem Swanenburg
1581-1612
Judas Iscariot, after Abraham Bloemaert
1611
Engraving on paper.
10 3/4 6 13/16 inches (273 x 171 mm)
Gift of William M. Voelkle.
2006.147
Published: 
1611
Provenance: 
William M. Voelkle, New York.
Inscription: 

Inscribed at upper right, "A Bloemaert Inventor / W. Swanenb. Sculpt et excud. / 1611."; in lower margin, Iamdudum temerasse Deum, nummosq[_] recepse / Poenitet. Heu! Ser ̣me metanoea coguit. / Prodebam Dominum, et perdebam me inscius, eheu! / Quid faciam? Collo culpa luenda meo est. / Dixit, et informi clusit sibi guttural nodo, / Et Judas ramis triste pependit onus. / IUDAS ISCARIOTH. P.S. extempore. 76."

Notes: 

Watermark:
This prints is part of a series of penitent saints engraved and published by Willem van Swanenburg after designs by Abraham Bloemaert, who conceived of them as three contrasting, yet compositionally related pairs: Peter and Paul, Zachaeus and the Magdalen, and King Saul and Judas Iscariot. Below each figure is an inscription composed by C. Plempius and Petrus Scriverious, two renowned Latinist poets. To portray the theme of sinners as a group was a fairly unique inconographic development that conveyed a strong Counter-Reformatory message in its promotion of the sacrament of penance, which had been refuted by the Calvinists. The typically Mannerist proportions and contorted poses of Bloemaert's figures clearly informed Swanenburg's often serpentine handling of the engraved line. Each figure is presented monumentally and in a dramatic pose, and background vignettes relate to the subjects' individual narratives. Our set of prints appears to have been issued for the 1719 edition of Gerard de Lairesse's Principles of Drawing. (Andaleeb Banta)

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