The Cleveland Museum of Art
Collection Online as of April 20, 2024
Saint Martin with his Horse on a Ship
c. 1561
(d. 1605)
(active 1554–1572)
after Hieronymus Bosch
(Netherlandish, 1440–1516)
Plate: 33.8 x 42.7 cm (13 5/16 x 16 13/16 in.)
Location: not on view
Did You Know?
The artist of this boisterous scene combined a saint’s charitable act with all manner of excessive behaviors that takes place in a contemporary coastal city much like that where the print was made.Description
During the 16th century, November 11 brought the feast day of Saint Martin in Northern Europe, accompanied by boisterous parties and drinking “St. Martin’s wine.” This print depicts one such feast gone awry, with the sins of gluttony, greed, and sloth on full display among the crowd of beggars and devils who fight for their chance at the wine, or for no apparent reason. In the center of the scene, Saint Martin stands ready to divide his cloak in order to share it with a beggar, the single act of charity in the scene.- P. de RamaixAlbert van Loock [1917-2011?], Brussels, BelgiumNovember 28, 2018(Galerie Bassenge, Berlin, Germany)2018-2020(Eric Gillis Fine Art, Brussels, Belgium)2020The Print Club of Cleveland, Cleveland, OHMarch 2, 2020The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH
- Grieken, Joris van, Ger Luijten, and Jan van der Stock. Hieronymus Cock: The Renaissance in Print. Brussels, Belgium: Mercatorfonds, 2013. cat. 65, p. 254-5Walsh, Martin W. “The Satirical Charity of Saint Martin from Bosch to the German Baroque: A Drawing by Michael Herri,” Notes in the History of Art, Vo. 33/No. 2 (Winter 2014) p. 21-30
- {{cite web|title=Saint Martin with his Horse on a Ship|url=false|author=Johannes I van Doetecum, Lucas van Doetecum, Hieronymus Bosch|year=c. 1561|access-date=20 April 2024|publisher=Cleveland Museum of Art}}
Source URL:
https://www.clevelandart.org/art/2020.99