museums and institutions:
Attributed works:
11. Detail of Fig.1, showing the hatching in the horse’s chin.
Attributed works:
12. Detail of Fig.8, showing the hatching beneath Hercules’ buttocks.
Attributed works:
13. Farnese Hercules, rear view, by Hendrick Goltzius. 1617.
Pen and ink on paper, 41.9 by 30.3 cm. (Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam).
Attributed works:
14. ‘Opus Praxitelis’: one of the Dioscuri of the Quirinal Hill, Rome,
by Hendrick Goltzius. 1591. Red chalk on paper, 37.8 by 32.6 cm.
(Teylers Museum, Haarlem).
Attributed works:
15. Detail of Fig.14, showing the vein in the horse’s right flank.
Attributed works:
16. Detail of Fig.13, showing the hatching in the buttocks.
Attributed works:
17. Marcus Aurelius equestrian monument, Rome, by Hendrick
Goltzius. 1591. Black and white chalk on blue paper, 36.8 by 30.5 cm.
(Teylers Museum, Haarlem).
Attributed works:
18. Detail of Fig.17, showing the reinforced outlines.
Attributed works:
19. Marcus Aurelius equestrian monument, Rome, by Hendrick Goltzius.
1591. Red chalk on paper, 40.9 by 31 cm. (Teylers Museum, Haarlem).
Attributed works:
2. Horse’s head, Marcus Aurelius equestrian monument, Rome,
here attributed to Hendrick Goltzius. After 1591. Red chalk
on paper, 44.5 by 28.7 cm. (excluding border). (Private collection).
Attributed works:
20 and 21. Details of Fig.19, showing passages of unblended hatching.
Attributed works:
3. Goltzius’s right hand, by Hendrick Goltzius. 1591. Red chalk
on paper, 36.9 by 18.6 cm. (Teylers Museum, Haarlem).
Attributed works:
4. Detail of Fig.1, showing the horse’s vein and eyeball.
Attributed works:
5. Farnese Hercules, rear view, by Hendrick Goltzius. 1591.
Black and white chalk on blue paper, 36.2 by 21 cm. (Teylers
Museum, Haarlem).
Attributed works:
6 and 7. Details of Fig.5, showing Hercules’ left thigh and calf.
Attributed works:
8. Farnese Hercules, rear view, by Hendrick Goltzius. 1591. Red chalk,
38.9 by 21.3 cm. (Teylers Museum, Haarlem).
Attributed works:
9 and 10. Details of Fig.8, showing the hatching in Hercules’ shoulder
blades and back.
Western art unattributed:
1. Detail of the horse’s head, Marcus Aurelius equestrian monument.
Rome, AD 161. Bronze, height 424 cm. (Musei Capitolini, Rome).