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
Goltzius popularized a style of engraving with mesmerizing patterns of curving, tapering, and crisscrossing lines; it was especially appreciated in the late 1500s. Designed for his pupil Saenredam to engrave, these prints depict the three goddesses from the tale of The Judgment of Paris , in which each claimed the golden apple awarded to the most beautiful. Jupiter deferred judgment to Paris, a mortal esteemed for his fair-mindedness. Juno and Athena tried to bribe Paris with an empire and skill in war, but Venus made him an offer he could not resist: Helen, the world’s most beautiful woman. The peacock identifies Juno, queen of the gods and the jealous wife (and sister) of Jupiter. Clad in armor, Pallas Athena is the goddess of wisdom, the arts, and warfare; an owl is her sage companion. The presentation of the deities in separate prints suggests that viewers may also play Paris’s role and decide themselves which goddess the artists made most beautiful.
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Jan Saenredam — Juno, from Three Goddesses
Jan Saenredam — Pallas Athena, from Three Goddesses
Jacob Matham — Temperance, from The Virtues
Jacob Matham — Faith, from The Virtues
Philips Galle — Ratio, from "Proposopographia"
Jacques de Gheyn II|Zacharias Dolendo — Wealth, from Virtues
Battista Franco|Anonymous, Italian, second half of the 16th
Cherubino Alberti (Zaccaria Mattia) — Venus on a half-shell,
Bartholomeus Spranger|Jan Muller — Minerva
Cherubino Alberti (Zaccaria Mattia) — Venus on a half-shell,
Agostino Veneziano (Agostino dei Musi)|Raphael (Raffaello Sa
Jacob Matham — Hope, from The Virtues