A personification of the South Sea Company, with people showing the effects of its collapse. Etching, ca. 1720.
- Date:
- [1720?]
- Reference:
- 812068i
- Part of:
- Groote tafereel der dwaasheid.
- Pictures
About this work
Description
The following is based on the British Museum online catalogue. Within an oval, a woman, representing the South Sea Company, reclines with a breast exposed against a table on which lie papers, including one reading 'Ik moet me na Vianen, neen, neen, ik bedekt my met het schil van Fred: Hend' (I must go to Vianen [a place of sanctuary], I protect myself with the shield of Frederik Hendrik [as an optimistic appeal to power]). She is attended by four putti, one representing fame, another playing a lyre; on the floor are ledgers recording large debts on South Sea Company shares
To the left are richly bound books representing the library of a ruined investor ("Biblioteek van een bedroefde actionist"), while to the right ships founder in the stormy South Pacific (identified by a label "Zuid Zé" held by a putto).
In the corners of the print outside the oval are four vignettes. Top left, a man on a platform ignores a barrel of herring, an Edam cheese and vegetables lying on the ground while he gorges himself on coins from a sack and defecates share certificates. The other vignettes apparently represent impoverished shareholders.Top right, a woman with a basket of dead geese encounters a man pushing a wheelbarrow or handcart full of stones: she appears to offer her geese in exchange for his stones, while a goose flies above with a barrel tied to its back. Lower left, four men dig a stony road leading towards a walled city. Lower right, a woman holding a fish addresses a swineherd
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Where to find it
Location Status Access Closed stores