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
Etienne Delaune (French, 1518/19-1583) Combats and Triumphs, probably 1560s Engravings Gift of Leonard C. Hanna 1924.671-.674 The Triumph of Bacchus Battle of Men and Animals Combat of the Naked Men Battle of the Centaurs and the Lapiths The four prints shown here come from a series of twelve known as the Combats and Triumphs. The friezelike composition reflects the artist's study of marble relief carvings on Greek and Roman sarcophagi (coffins), here reduced to a preciously small setting. Against a flat, stagelike background, Delaune's balletic warriors engage in a Mannerist version of artificial war. Etienne Delaune was inspired by the art created at Fontainebleau, but he worked in Paris and then Strasbourg during the late 1500s. His small, exquisitely executed engravings reflect his training as a goldsmith and his work as a medallist.
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Étienne Delaune — Combats and Triumphs
Étienne Delaune — Combats and Triumphs
Jan Saenredam (Dutch, 1565–1607) — Pallas Athena
Léon Davent|Francesco Primaticcio — Bellona Seated on her Tr
Jan Saenredam (Dutch, 1565–1607) — Three Goddesses
Jan Saenredam — Pallas Athena, from Three Goddesses
Etienne Delaune — Combats et Triomphes
Balthazar Moncornet|Anonymous|Peter Paul Rubens — The Trophy
Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo — Roman arms, standards, and troph
Giulio Bonasone|Anonymous — Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae:
Nicolas Beatrizet|Nicolas Beatrizet — Speculum Romanae Magni
Hans Sebald Beham — Jupiter, plate two from The Seven Planet