
Hercules Killing Cacus
<p>To make a chiaroscuro woodcut, an artist uses a separate woodblock for printing each different color of ink. Often, as was the case for both of these prints, the image was rendered primarily in a line block, usually in black. The additional colors—together with the color of the paper itself—provide more definition to the forms and more dramatic light effects.<br>The virtuoso graphic artist Hendrick Goltzius used the chiaroscuro woodcut technique to great effect in his depiction of Hercules completing the 10th of his 12 labors: the capture of the cattle of Geryon. To accomplish this feat, he had to vanquish the giant Cacus. Goltzius shows the moment just before Hercules violently clubs the giant, which is made especially dramatic by the vivid conjunction of yellow and green.<br>Although Goltzius's advances in line engraving found many followers, few artists pursued his equally original exploration of chiaroscuro woodcuts printed from one line block and multiple tone blocks. The largest, and one of the earliest of the chiaroscuro woodcuts from Goltzius's workshop, this dramatic print is also the only one to have a date cut into the block. Here Hercules slays Cacus, a cattle thief, in his cave in the Aventine hills.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1588
- Dimensions
- Image/plate/sheet trimmed to platemark: 41 × 33.2 cm (16 3/16 × 13 1/8 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Hendrick Goltzius
Artist

Printmaking
Monogrammist L. K. (17th century)
Full artist profile →More
More by Hendrick Goltzius
Loth and his Daughters
1616 · canvas, oil paint (paint)
The Fall of Man
1616 · oil on canvas
Dying Adonis
1609 · oil paint (paint), canvas
Judah and Thamar
1600 · Engraving on laid paper
Two Male Heads after the Antique, the Sons of Laocoön
1600 · Red chalk on ivory laid paper
Landscape with a Shepherd Couple
1600 · Chiaroscuro woodcut from three blocks printed in green on ivory laid paper
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Hendrick Goltzius
- Year
- 1588
- Dimensions
- Image/plate/sheet trimmed to platemark: 41 × 33.2 cm (16 3/16 × 13 1/8 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1588-132801
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





