Not currently on view
In the collection of Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · as of July 2026
FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG
With the help of a staff, Fortuna, the goddess of fortune or chance, balances on a sphere and holds a sprig of flowers in her left hand. In addition to representing her instability, the sphere suggests the worldly domain over which she influences at random. The flowers, traditionally identified as Eryngium, held aphrodisiac powers, suggesting the fickle nature of love. A more recent interpretation identifies them as Sternkraut, a plant that symbolized the idea that one’s fate has already been written. Both readings of the engraving, whether it regards love or life, inform the viewer that destiny is not of one’s own choosing.
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Albrecht Dürer — Fortune
Albrecht Dürer — The Little Fortune
Agostino Veneziano (Agostino dei Musi)|Raphael (Raffaello Sa
Battista Franco|Anonymous, Italian, second half of the 16th
Giovanni Jacopo Caraglio|Rosso Fiorentino — Plate 8: Proserp
Philips Galle — Veritas, from "Proposopographia"
Agostino Veneziano (Agostino dei Musi)|Giulio Romano|Raphael
Philips Galle|Philips Galle|Jacques Jonghelinck — Plate 7: D
Agostino Veneziano (Agostino dei Musi)|Raphael (Raffaello Sa
Georg Pencz (German, c. 1500–1550) — Procris
Jacob Matham — Temperance, from The Virtues
Philips Galle — Ratio, from "Proposopographia"