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Inscription

upper center in red ink: SVPER ASPIDEM ET BASILISCVM AMBVLABIS / et conculcabis leonem et Draconem.ps.90 (“You shall tread upon the asp and the basilisk and you shall trample under foot the lion and the dragon.” Psalms 90:13) (Latin Vulgate Bible); center right in brown ink: LX.; animals in image numbered .1., .2., .3., and .4., in red ink; lower center in blue ink: Et semper recto lapsurus limite CENCHRIS / Pluribus ille notis variatam tingitur aluum.
Facing page: upper center in brown ink: Sibilaq[ue] effundens cunctas terrentia pestes, / Ante venena nocens, late sibi submovet omne / vulgus, et in vacua regnat Basiliscus arena.; lower center in brown ink: Ne Intuearis vinum quando flavescit, cum splenduerit / In vitro color eius: Ingredit[ur] blande, sed in novissimo / mordebit ut Coluber, et sicut REGVLVS venena diffundet. / proverb.23. (“Look not upon the wine when it is yellow, when the color thereof shines in the glass, it goes in pleasantly. But in the end it will bite like a snake and will spread abroad poison like a basilisk.” Proverbs 23:31-32) (Latin Vulgate Bible)

Provenance

Emperor Rudolf II of Austria?[1]; Secretarius Heinrich Hagen, Vienna, 1611.[2] Count Emanuel Maria Joseph von Arco, Munich, 1751.[3] Graf von Seinsheim, canon of Salzburg and Speyer, 1753. Master stonemason Rüpfel, Munich, c. 1830. Joseph Anton Niggl [1792 - 1842], Markt Tölz. Karl August von Brentano [1817 - 1896], Augsburg. (sale, Rudolph Weigel, 28 October 1861, no. 2220-a-d]; (Frederick Startridge Ellis [active 1860 - 1885], London; formerly identified as F. S. Eliot)[3]; Henry Huth [1815 - 1878], London; by descent to his son, Alfred Henry Huth [1850 - 1910], London; (sale, Sotheby's' London, 12 June 1913, no. 3722); (William Wesley & Son, London); Charles Francis George Richard Schwerdt, Old Alresford House, Hampshire (his sale, Sotheby's' London, 15 July 1946, no. 2216); (The Rosenbach Company, Philadelphia); Lessing J. Rosenwald, Jenkintown; given to Edith Goodkind Rosenwald, Jenkintown; gift to NGA, 1987.

Exhibition History

1982
Drawings from the Holy Roman Empire, = 1540 - 1680, The Art Museum, Princeton University, National Gallery of Art, Museum of Art, Carnegie Insitute, Pittsburgh (exh. cat. by Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann, no. 56.
1982
Drawings from the Holy Roman Empire, 1540 - 1680, The Art Museum, Princeton University, National Gallery of Art, Museum of Art, Carnegie Insitute, Pittsburgh (exh. cat. by Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann, no. 56.

Bibliography

1984
Hendrix, Lee. Joris Hoefnagel and the Four Elements: a Study in Sixteenth-Century Nature Painting. Ph.D. Hendrix, Lee. Joris Hoefnagel and the Four Elements: a Study in Sixteenth-Century Nature Painting. Ph.D. dissertation, Princeton University, 1984 (series).dissertation, Princeton University, 1984 (series).
2017
Vignau-Wilberg, Thea. Joris and Jacob Hoefnagel: Art and Science around 1600. Berlin, 2017: no. A6 (for series).
2019
Bass, Marisa Ann. Insect Artifice: Nature and Art in the Dutch Revolt. Princeton, 2019 (for series).

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