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Young Man Holding a Skull and a Tulip

Hendrick Goltzius1614

The Morgan Library & Museum

The Morgan Library & Museum
New York, United States

Hendrick Goltzius's large pen and ink drawing is among the most virtuosic artworks in the Morgan's collection, if not the broader history of draftsmanship. He skillfully depicts a young man, swathed in sumptuous garments adorned with bows and feathers, holding a tulip and a skull. The tousled-haired youth--still the picture of innocence with his smooth and supple baby face--is an early seventeenth-century vision of beauty that remains every bit as striking today. Goltzius matched his bravura drawing technique with his subject; steady and precise ink lines produce an exquisitely detailed artwork that invites admiration and close examination.

Goltzius honed his deft draftsmanship through the study and imitation of other artists. In this drawing, likely inspired by a Lucas van Leyden print, he executes the work in the manner of a printed engraving. Though Goltzius was an accomplished printmaker, this Federkunststücke (or drawing that imitates engraving) was completed during a period long after he had ceased to work with the graver on copper, partially because of the deterioration of his eyesight.

This life-size “fantasy portrait,” so-called because it depicts an imagined rather than real person, is among the last of Goltzius's large showpieces that he had produced throughout his career. His distinctive style was a product of his way of gripping drawing implements--a technique he developed as a result of a childhood accident that burned his right hand and fused together several fingers.

On the center left side of the print is the Latin inscription (Quis evadet? Nemo / Who escapes? No man). This message, alongside skull, tulip, and small hourglass in the drawing's background, indicate that the drawing is a vanitas, a memento mori, or reminder of the transience of life. Goltzius' work suggests that even the vital young man with the passing of time will fade and decay like the short-lived tulip. The youth's right hand grasps the tulip's stem in a manner perhaps reminiscent of the same virtuosic grip Goltzius used on his quill or engraving burin. This subtle gesture may reveal the artist's meditation on furtive beauty, and those who wield it. The present drawing proved prophetic, for Goltzius died just two years later, having made an artful life from a life of art making.

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The Morgan Library & Museum

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