The legendary Wonders of the World,
imposing monuments of ancient history, have elicited admiration and whetted the
imagination of artists ever since the times of Antiquity. The number and
composition of the Wonders changed over time. The classic list of the Seven
Wonders of the World comprises the Pyramids of Egypt (the Pyramids in Giza), the
Hanging Gardens of Babylon, the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus, the Statue of
Zeus at Olympia, the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus, the Colossus of Rhodes, and
the Lighthouse of Alexandria. With the exception of the pyramid, these
architectural and artistic works have not survived and their later
representation was very much based on the artists’ imagination. An awareness
about the astonishing monuments of the bygone times survived the Middle Ages
and the notion of the World’s Wonders was re-awoken in the culture of Humanism.
This theme was rediscovered for the visual arts by the Dutch painter Maarten
van Heemskerck who, in partnership with the engraver Philips Galle, published a
series of engravings known as The Eight
Wonders of the World (1572). In the early 17th century, two more cycles
were issued; a series of engravings after Maarten de Vos (1614) closely
emulating Heemskerck’s work and the more inventive cycle by Antonio Tempesta
(1608). A selection from these three print series will form the core of a small
exhibition on view in the Graphic Arts Cabinet. Valuable prints loaned from the
collections of Royal Canonry of Premonstratensians at Strahov in Prague will be
also exhibited.
A mini-catalogue in Czech and English is accompanying the exhibition.
A mini-catalogue in Czech and English is accompanying the exhibition.
Curator: Petra Zelenková
Schwarzenberg Palace, Graphic Art Cabinet
1—1 / 5