Friday, December 15, 2017

Seasons in Pictures and Words

attributed to Hendrik van Balen
Cybele and the Seasons, with Garland
ca. 1615
oil on panel
Prado, Madrid

Giuseppe Maria Crespi
Apotheosis of Hercules, with the Four Seasons
ca. 1700
ceiling fresco
Palazzo Pepoli-Campogrande, Bologna

Bartolomeo Manfredi
Allegory of the Four Seasons
ca. 1610
oil on canvas
Dayton Art Institute, Ohio

ALL WORLDLY PLEASURES FADE

The winter with his griefly stormes no lenger dare abyde,
The pleasant grasse, with lusty grene, the earth hath newly dyde.
The trees have leves, the bowes down spread, new changed is the yere.
The water brokes are cleane sanke down, the pleasant bankes apere.
The spring is come, the goodly nymphes now dance in every place
Thus hath the yere most pleasantly of late ychangde his face.
Hope for no immortalitie, for wealth will weare away,
As we may learne by every yere, yea howres of every day.
For Zepharus doth mollifye the colde and blustering windes:
The somers drought doth take away the spryng out of our minds.
And yet the somer cannot last, but once must step asyde,
The Autumn thinkes to kepe his place, but Autumn cannot bide.
For when he hath brought furth his fruits and stuft the barns with corn,
The winter eates and empties all, and thus is Autumn worne.
Then hory frostes possesse the place, the tempestes work much harm,
The rage of stormes done make al colde which somer had made so warm
Wherefore let no man put his trust in that, that will decay,
For slipper wealth will not continue, pleasure will weare away.
For when that we have lost our lyfe, and lye under a stone,
What are we then, we are but earth, then is our pleasure gon.
No man can tell what god almight of every wight doth cast,
No man can say to day I live, till morne my life shall last.
For when thou shalt before thy judge stand to receive thy doom,
What sentence Minos doth pronounce that must of thee become.
Then shall not noble stock and blud redeme thee from his handes,
Nor sugared talke with eloquence shal lowse thee from his handes.
Nor yet thy lyfe uprightly led, can help thee out of hell,
For who descendeth downe so depe, must there abyde and dwell.
Diana could not thence deliver chaste Hyppolitus,
Nor Theseus could not call to life his friende Perithous.

– translated anonymously from the Odes of Horace and published (1557) in Tottel's Miscellany

Nicolas Poussin
Four Seasons (Spring) - Garden of Eden
1660-64
oil on canvas
Louvre, Paris

Nicolas Poussin
Four Seasons (Summer) - Ruth and Boaz
1660-64
oil on canvas
Louvre, Paris

Nicolas Poussin
Four Seasons (Autumn) - Return of the Spies
1660-64
oil on canvas
Louvre, Paris

Nicolas Poussin
Four Seasons (Winter) - The Deluge
1660-64
oil on canvas
Louvre, Paris

Francesco Foschi
Winter Landscape with Figures
ca. 1750-80
oil on canvas
Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid

Francesco Foschi
Winter Landscape with Peasant Family
ca. 1750-80
oil on canvas
Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid

Denys van Alsloot
Winter Landscape
1610
oil on panel
Louvre, Paris

Francisco Goya
Tapestry cartoon - Snowstorm
1786
oil on canvas
Prado, Madrid

William Williams
Thunderstorm with the Death of Amelia
(illustration of 'Summer' from James Thomson's poem, The Seasons)

1784
oil on canvas
Tate Britain

Caspar David Friedrich
Monk by the Sea
ca. 1808-10
oil on canvas
Alte Nationalgalerie Berlin

John Singer Sargent
Mannequin in the Snow
ca. 1891-93
oil on canvas
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York