Allegory of the Months February and March

Joos de Momper the Younger Netherlandish
Former Attribution Pieter Stevens Netherlandish

Not on view

This colorful landscape by Joos de Momper is an allegory of the months February and March. It once belonged to a series of six sheets that each illustrated two consequtive months of the year. This kind of allegorical imagery was extremely popular in early modern Europe. The pictures were not intended to be merely appealing to the eye but also to the mind: they needed to be interpreted to reveal a hidden meaning. Although a modern day viewer may be lost in translation, the contemporary audience would have readily understood that this landscape symbolized the winter months, for the pruning of trees, depicted on the right, was an activity, typically reserved for March. A second drawing that belonged to the same allegorical series, was sold at auction in 2007. It depicts the months December and January, and was based directly on the well-known painting Hunters in the Snow by Pieter Bruegel the Elder (1525–69, Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, inv. no. GG 1838).

More examples of allegorical imagery by De Momper are known: the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam holds nine preparatory drawings, equally intended for a seriest of months of the year. Our drawing, as far as we know, was never brought into print. Because of its high finish, it is likely that the drawing was intended to be sold on the open market as a set together with its companion pieces.

Allegory of the Months February and March, Joos de Momper the Younger (Netherlandish, Antwerp 1564–1635 Antwerp), Pen and brown ink and watercolor; framing line in black ink

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