Melancholy by Lucas Cranach the Elder - 1532 - 51 x 97 cm Statens Museum for Kunst Melancholy by Lucas Cranach the Elder - 1532 - 51 x 97 cm Statens Museum for Kunst

Melancholy

oil on canvas • 51 x 97 cm
  • Lucas Cranach the Elder - c. 1472 - October 16, 1553 Lucas Cranach the Elder 1532

For the next four Sundays we will present the masterpieces from Statens Museum for Kunst :) Enjoy!

With only a stick to help them, three nude boy children attempt to play a game, the object of which is to pass a large ball through a hoop.

A winged woman, lost in thought, splits a stick, seemingly in the process of making another hoop.

Through reference to a similar figure in an Albrecht Dürer print, the seated female has been read as a personification of Melancholy, one of the four temperaments. Renaissance scholars believed that the world was built from a system of correspondences. Melancholy was associated with Saturn, winter, the dragon, lead, and earth.

The other three were the choleric, the sanguine, and the phlegmatic temperaments. Each of these corresponded to other elements, metals, animals, and seasons. In Cranach’s painting, melancholy seems to be linked to something negative: a demonic witches’ ride takes place in a black cloud outside.

Perhaps Cranach’s Melancholy reflects his friend Martin Luther’s perception of melancholy as a ”bath of Satan” to be fought with ”spiritual joy” and faith in the Word of God. Whatever the case may be, the enigmatic nature of Cranach’s painting leaves it open to individual interpretation.