One four-masted and two armed three-masted ships anchored off a fortified island with a lighthouse
Artist
Production date
January 1 – 2 1561
Object number
59.534.23
Material

Engraving and etching; three states known

Inscription
Signed at lower right: · F · H · bruegel ·; privilege in the margin at lower right: · Cum · privileg
Dimensions
29.4 cm x 22.6 cm
Keywords

This engraving belongs to a series of ten prints known as the Sailing Vessels, executed by Frans Huys after designs by Pieter Bruegel the Elder. The series displays a wide range of sailing vessels, including merchantmen and warships, large seagoing vessels and small coasters, galleys, and caravels. Here, Bruegel depicted a four-master, i.e., a ship with four masts, and two three-masters anchored near a fortified island capped by a lighthouse. The detail and painstaking accuracy with which the vessels are rendered attests to the artist's great care and leaves no doubt that Bruegel must have prepared for the series by making numerous sketches and elaborate studies—all of which unfortunately are lost. At what point in his life Bruegel became interested in the subject of ships is unclear, but the deep fascination the citizens of Antwerp took in it is understandable given the nature of the city's economy. As a mercantile superpower with direct access to the North Sea, and as home to some of the most ambitious traders and explorers in Europe, Antwerp took great pride in the prowess and engineering of their ships and in their connection to the sea. Whatever the precise source of their appeal, Bruegel's series of Sailing Vessels was a highly sophisticated creation that far surpassed previous examples of the genre in technique and imagination.

Other artworks of this artist

Ira (Wrath)
The Poor Kitchen
Superbia (Pride)
Avaritia (Avarice)
Gula (Gluttony)
Invidia (Envy)
Luxuria (Lust)
The Fight over Money
Saint James and the Magician Hermogenes
The Ass at School
The Witch of Mallegem (Stone operation)
The big fish eat the little fish
Patientia (Patience)