
Hercules Slaying Envy
<p>Peter Paul Rubens, like Rembrandt van Rijn, realized printmaking’s enormous potential. Rubens was more concerned with disseminating his style and reproducing his painted compositions than with creating original subjects in print. While several artists engraved Rubens’s paintings, only one, Christoffel Jegher, cut the nine surviving woodcuts based on his work. Both Jegher’s and Rubens’s names appear, with the privilege (an early form of copyright), at the lower right of the dramatic <em>Hercules Slaying Envy</em>. This composition relates to a painting that Rubens was completing at the time for James I of England; its scale and broad cutting admirably reflect the artist’s florid painting style.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1633
- Medium
- Woodcut on ivory paper
- Dimensions
- Image/block/sheet: 60.2 × 36.2 cm (23 3/4 × 14 5/16 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Christoffel Jegher
Artist

Printmaking
Christoffel Jegher (Flemish, 1596-1652/53)
Full artist profile →More
More by Christoffel Jegher
The Temptation of Christ by the Devil
1633 · Woodcut in black on cream laid paper, tipped onto ivory laid paper mount prepared with ochre wash
Portrait of Doge Giovanni Cornaro
1632 · Chiaroscuro woodcut in beige, ochre, and two tones of brown on cream laid paper
The Coronation of the Virgin
1630 · Woodcut on cream laid paper
The Drunken Silenus
1630 · Woodcut on ivory laid paper
The Garden of Love, Left Half, with Seated Woman
1625 · Woodcut on ivory laid paper
The Garden of Love, Right Half
1625 · Woodcut on ivory laid paper
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Christoffel Jegher
- Year
- 1633
- Medium
- Woodcut on ivory paper
- Dimensions
- Image/block/sheet: 60.2 × 36.2 cm (23 3/4 × 14 5/16 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1633-074964
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





