40. The Golden Age (1605), Joachim Wtewael
Where can I see it?: The Metropolitan Museum of Art
With fig leaves and drapery coyly disguising the more erotic elements of this scene, Joachim Wtewael looks back on the Garden of Eden as an idyllic time when mankind lived unfettered by laws and government. Often considered the premier example of Netherland Mannerism—and made at a time when many of the artists’ peers were already moving on to realism—the painting was inspired by the opening pages of Ovid’s Metamorphoses, which describes Eden as “spring everlasting” where mankind lived in harmony with all creation. But it’s easy to imagine the artist also relishing a time when the conventions of painting could be improvised and reinterpreted, allowing him space for unfettered imagination.—Barbara Pollack
Photograph: Courtesy the Metropolitan Museum of Art; The Edward Joseph Gallagher III Memorial Collection; Edward J. Gallagher Jr. Bequest; Lila Acheson Wallace Gift; special funds; and Gift of George Blumenthal; Bequest of Lillian S. Timken; The Collectio