AMSTERDAM.- Last month the catalogue New Hollstein Hendrick Goltzius was published. This catalogue is the first to describe and illustrate all 380 prints by Hendrick Goltzius (1558-1617). The collection kept by the Department of Prints and Drawings provided the basis for this standard reference work, which is being published in collaboration with the Rijksmuseum. To mark the publication, the
Rijksmuseum is hosting the exhibition Honour Surpasses Gold: Hendrick Goltziuss Print Firm, which features more than 30 prints and drawings from the Rijksmuseums own collection.
New Hollstein Hendrick Goltzius consists of four volumes, compiled by the art historian Marjolein Leesberg and edited by Huigen Leeflang, curator at the Rijksmuseum. The first two volumes contain extensive catalogue information and reproductions of all prints attributed to Goltzius. The third and fourth volumes, which will be published this summer, include approximately 420 prints based on Goltziuss designs but produced by apprentices, assistants and others. Together with the catalogue of Goltziuss own work, the four volumes represent the first time that a complete picture has been provided of the artists inventiveness and his development as a printmaker and designer.
Hendrick Goltzius was the most important and most influential engraver of his time. Prints produced in his Haarlem workshop were sold throughout Europe and brought Goltzius international acclaim. The works of the master are still collected with a passion and represent the jewel in the crown of many print collections. Although the international sales of his prints made Goltzius a wealthy man, the ambitious artist in keeping with his motto Honour surpasses gold set much more store by his artistic renown than by personal gain.