File:LIE 1976 MiNr0657 mt B002a.jpg

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Captions

Captions

Stamp from Liechtenstein

Summary[edit]

Description

Stamp of the Principality of Liechtenstein; 1976; commemorative stamp of the issue "400th Anniversary of Birth of Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640)"; stamp issue with paintings by Peter Paul Rubens from the Princely Art Collections of Liechtenstein; stamp motive with the painting "The discovery of the infant Erichthonius" (painting name on the stamp: "The daughters of the Cecrops"), created in 1616; Erichthonius = the later King of Athens = Mother: the Goddess Athena, Father: the Smith God Hephaestos (one variant of the ancient Greek mythos); the three daughters are Herse, Aglaurus, and Pandrosus; (to the pictured story see below); painting in the style of the Flemish Baroque; mint stamp

Peter Paul Rubens  (1577–1640)  wikidata:Q5599 s:sl:Peter Paul Rubens q:en:Peter Paul Rubens
 
Peter Paul Rubens
Alternative names
Rubens, Pierre Paul Rubens, Pieter Paul Rubens, Sir Peter Paul Rubens
Description Flemish painter, sculptor, drawer and printmaker
Date of birth/death 28 June 1577 Edit this at Wikidata 30 May 1640 Edit this at Wikidata
Location of birth/death Siegen Antwerp
Work period 16th century
date QS:P,+1550-00-00T00:00:00Z/7
 Edit this at Wikidata
Work location
Antwerp (1589-1600), Mantua (9 May 1600-1608), Spain (1603), Antwerp (1608-1640), Netherlands (1612), Paris (23 May 1623-29 June 1623, 4 February 1625-9 June 1625), Calais (November 1626), Paris (December 1626), City of Brussels (1627), Netherlands (10 July 1627-6 August 1627), Spain (26 August 1628-29 April 1629), London (18 May 1629-23 March 1630), City of Brussels (1631), Netherlands (November 1631), Affligem (September 1634)
Authority file
creator QS:P170,Q5599

Note: Quotation from the catalogue of the Princely Art Collections: "...Rubens chose a rarely depicted subject for his Discovery of the Infant Erichthonius, A cruel story precedes the erotic depiction of the daughters of Cecrops: Vulcan tried to rape the virgin Minerva who managed to escape, however. The god’s semen fell on the ground, impregnating the earth goddess Gaia, who bore the infant Erichthonius who had the form of a serpent. Minerva had to hide this little monster in a basket that she handed over for safekeeping to the daughters of the Athenian king Cecrops, Aglaurus, Herse and Pandrosus who disobeyed the goddess’s orders that the basket should not be opened and so uncovered its secret. Rubens followed Ovid, who leaves the daughters’ curiosity unpunished in his Metamorphoses, while other ancient authors report that the disobedient women went mad at their discovery and threw themselves off the Acropolis. Pictorial elements like the fountain figure of Daphne, the dolphins and the herm of Pan, the god of the fields, are to be read as symbols of fertility and sensuality, and allude to the tale just related and its consequences. For the beauty of Herse, which Ovid describes so eloquently, Rubens went back to Praxiteles’s famous statue of Aphrodite (40 BC). Although the original is lost, its form is familiar from countless copies. Its magic lies in the ambivalent expressiveness of her gestures, which make it uncertain whether the goddess is revealing herself or covering herself up. But Rubens also reused his own figures and facial types, which he often took from his head studies: the gracious face of Herse with the almond-shaped, slanting eyes is reminiscent of those of the bacchante in the painting Maid with Fruit Basket..."
Stamp: Michel: No. 657; Yvert et Tellier: No. 598; Scott: Scott: No. 597
Color: multicolored with gold
Watermark: none
Nominal value: 1.00 (Franken, Franc)
Postage validity: from 9 September 1976 until 31 December 2001

Stamp picture size (printed area without signature line): 49.5 x 38.0 mm
Date (first issue day of the stamp)
Source scan of original
Author Swiss Post as contract partner of the Government of Liechtenstein
Permission
(Reusing this file)
Public domain
This image is from or of:
  • a law, ordinance, international treaty or other official act
  • a decision, protocol or report by public authorities
  • a means of payment
  • a patent or patent application

of Liechtenstein. It is therefore not protected by copyright by virtue of Art. 5 of the Liechtenstein Copyright Act.


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Picture description Peter Paul Rubens, "The discovery of the infant Erichthonius" (1616)
First day of issue
Publisher Swiss Post as contract partner of the Government of Liechtenstein
Design Karl Gessner and Walter Wachter (design),

Alfred Fischer (* 1926) (engraving)

Printer "Österreichische Staatsdruckerei", Vienna
Printing technique Recess printing and photogravure, combined
Circulation 1,020,734 (in sheets à 8 stamps)
Perforation Comb perforation, K 14 : 14¼
MICHEL Nr. Liechtenstein, Nr. 657
SCOTT Nr. Liechtenstein, No. 597

File history

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current18:50, 8 August 2018Thumbnail for version as of 18:50, 8 August 20181,732 × 1,396 (975 KB)Katharinaiv (talk | contribs){{Information |Description=Stamp of the Principality of Liechtenstein; 1976; commemorative stamp of the issue "400th Anniversary of Birth of Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640)"; stamp issue with paintings by Peter Paul Rubens from the Princely Art Collections of Liechtenstein; stamp motive with the painting "The discovery of the infant Erichthonius" (painting name on the stamp: "The daughters of the Cecrops"), created in 1616; Erichthonius = the later King of Athens...

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