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
This series by Herman Swanevelt, The Flight into Egypt, illustrates an event from the New Testament of the Bible. Joseph, Mary, and Christ fled into Egypt to escape King Herod's persecution. Traditionally represented as a single image, Swanevelt enlarged the story into four scenes. The Holy family is first shown traveling with three angels behind them, then Joseph helps Mary off the donkey, next Joseph leads the donkey to water as Mary changes the child, and finally the family is at rest. However, the main focus of each of these prints is the depiction of landscape, a genre that reached unprecedented levels of popularity during the 1600s. The scenery, looking much more like the Italian countryside than Egypt, was inspired by Swanevelt's paintings. Although he was Dutch, he spent most of his career in Paris and Rome. As a painter, he was known for his ability to convey warm, glowing sunlight, a quality also found in his etchings.
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Anthonie Waterloo (Dutch, 1609/10–1690) — Six large upright
Jean Morin|Jacques Fouquieres — Paysan et Paysanne en Marche
Jean Morin|Jacques Fouquieres — Le Bouvier pres d'une mare
Anthonie Waterloo (Dutch, 1609/10–1690) — Six large upright
Anthonie Waterloo (Dutch, 1609/10–1690) — Six large upright
Jan Both (Dutch, c. 1618–1652) — Ox-Cart. View between Ancon
Anonymous|Herman van Swanevelt — Satyrs in a Landscape
Anthonie Waterloo — Tobias and the Angel
Anthonie Waterloo (Dutch, 1609/10–1690) — Six large upright
Anthonie Waterloo (Dutch, 1609/10–1690) — Six large upright
Anthonie Waterloo (Dutch, 1609/10–1690) — Six large upright
Giovanni Francesco Grimaldi — Three boys in a landscape with