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
Dating from early in Albrecht Dürer’s career, this engraving cannot be tied to a specific narrative but may allude to the Greek goddess of the underworld, Hecate. Four nude women gather under an orb with a skull at their feet, while a ghoul emerges to their left. Three of the women could represent Hecate, who was often depicted with three faces or bodies; the fourth may be Diana, Hecate’s counterpart on earth. The nudity and allusions to black magic suggest mischief and the realm of witches. Prints offered a new medium for exploring subject matter that was deemed inappropriate in other media, such as painting.
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Albrecht Dürer — The Four Naked Women
Israhel van Meckenem, the younger — The Four Witches
Albrecht Dürer — Four Naked Women
Albrecht Dürer — Four Naked Women
Christoph Murer — The Three Graces (recto); Four putti engag
Heinrich Aldegrever — Bathsheba at the Bath
Pieter Tanjé — The Three Graces
Pieter de Jode II|Peter Paul Rubens — The Three Graces
Pieter de Jode II|Peter Paul Rubens — The Three Graces
School of Marcantonio Raimondi — Venus, Cupid and Pallas
Hans Sebald Beham — The Judgment of Paris
Albrecht Dürer — Hercules at the Crossroads (Jealousy)