Abundantia from The Four Continents and Related Allegories

<p>In this tapestry, part of a <em>Four Continents and Related Allegories</em> set, Abundantia, a female personification of abundance, sits on a horn of plenty overflowing with fruit, surrounded by three female attendants, each representing a continent. The kneeling woman crowned with a circlet of blossoms, offering a basket of flowers and fruit, personifies Asia. The dark-skinned woman bearing a horn of plenty full of sheaves of grain represents Africa. The third attendant, who wears a feathered headdress and displays gold, silver, and pearls, can be identified as America. The attributes of all four figures are based on Cesare Ripa’s <em>Iconologia</em> (1593), and their depiction exemplifies the early style of their designer, Lodewijck van Schoor: they have elongated bodies, small heads, long noses, and broad arms and legs, and though they gesture dramatically, their poses are formulae repeated throughout the set.</p>

Catalogue

Year
1670
Dimensions
371.2 × 382.5 cm (146 1/8 × 150 1/2 in.)

Artist

Lodewijk van Schoor
Lodewijk van Schoor

Textile

After a cartoon by Lodewijk van Schoor (died 1702) and Pieter Spierinckx (1635–1711)

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