Nova Reperta - 'Allegory of America'
"Americae Retectio", circa 1615 ("Allegory of America" engraving by Jan Galle after Jan van der Straet).
This is the first plate from the series entitled NOVA REPERTA, which surveys new inventions and discoveries made during the Renaissance from a European perspective. In this engraving, the Florentine explorer Amerigo VESPUCCI is shown as he first encounters America. Stradanus presents the continent as an allegorical figure; a sexualized young woman gesturing towards Vespucci from her hammock. She wears only a feathered headdress and skirt, her club abandoned against the tree at the right, where an anteater is shown feasting. Set behind her in the rolling landscape are other animals associated with the Americas—a horse and a bear. Also depicted is a scene of cannibalism.
Johannes STRADANUS or van der Straat, (1523-1605) was a Flemish artist but spent much of his life in Florence. Stradanus sent his original drawings of "Nova Reperta" ("New Inventions"), a Renaissance celebration of recent discoveries both scientific and geographical, to Antwerp where they were first engraved and published by Phillipe Galle circa 1600. (Antwerp: Jan Galle, 1638). The original from which this was scanned is found at the Smithsonian Library
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Allegory of America, from New Inventions of Modern Times (Nova Reperta), plate 1 of 19
The representation of the Four Continents—Africa, America, Asia and Europe—as female allegorical figures with their so-called attributes has a long history and was standardized in the late sixteenth century by Cesare Ripa in his influential emblem book Iconologia. Since such allegories were almost exclusively the work of white male European artists, they represent a biased point of view and promote a Christian Eurocentric sense of self that epitomizes formative habits of racial and gender stereotyping.
Here, VESPUCCI carries a staff with a crucifix at its pinnacle and a banner of the Southern Cross. He also holds a brass mariner's astrolabe which helped him navigate the seas to find new lands to explore and people to exploit on behalf of Spain and Portugal. Vespucci undertook several expeditions to South and Central America between 1497 and 1504, spurred by Christopher Columbus’s earlier journey.
In the preparatory drawing for this print (1974.205), Vespucci is shown naming the allegorical figure America, a feminized version of his own name.
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