An arch decorated with a panel representing Ferdinand of Spain as Hercules choosing duty over pleasure. Etching by T. van Thulden after Sir P.P. Rubens.

  • Rubens, Peter Paul, 1577-1640.
Date:
[1642]
Reference:
11332i
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Description

An arch erected outside the abbey of St. Michael, Antwerp. The arch is toppped by an acroterion with the coat-of-arms of Ferdinand, a prince's crown, and a cardinal's hat, above which are a laurel branch and crossed palms encircled by a wreath. A banderolle across the palms proclaims the motto "Ardua per praeceps gloria vadit iter". To left and right stand angels holding banners inscriped P and F (Princeps Ferdinandus?). On either side of the pediment is a seated sphinx

The panel on the arch is described as follows in the British Museum online catalogue: "at centre, filling the tympanum is a large canvas representing the choice of Hercules at the moment he decides to follow the path of virtue; at the centre of the picture the Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand appears in the guise of Hercules Prodicius, wearing a lion's skin and holding his club in the company of Minerva at right, and Venus, Cupid and Bacchus at left, with a cannon and other military implements in the foreground; on the hilltop in the background stand the temples of Virtue and Honour, guarded by hybrid beasts." On the base of the panel is an inscription: "Herculi alexikakoi. Ardua saxoso semita clivo calcatur Fernande, tibi. Malesuada voluptas pellitur etc."

Publication/Creation

[Antwerp], [1642]

Physical description

1 print : etching

Lettering

Arcus ad D. Michaelis. Pars prior: Hercules Prodicius. P.P. Rub. invent. C. Gev. epig. illustrabat. T. a. Thul. fe.

Creator/production credits

Latin verses by Jean-Gaspard Gevaerts (Casperius Gevartius)

Reference

Wellcome Collection 11332i

Reproduction note

After a design produced by Rubens in 1635 for a triumphal arch in Antwerp

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