
The German painter Jonas Umbach was well known in his day and patronized by a major Augsburg bishop. He was also a prolific printmaker, producing some 300 etchings. This work come from a series of Italian landscapes he may have made during a trip to Italy around 1648. Umbach’s magnificent trees and vistas were particularly influenced by 16th-century German landscapes by the Danube School and 17th-century works by the Dutch painter and printmaker Jacob van Ruisdael. Umbach signed his name and hometown, Augsburg, in the pedestal of the lion statue at the beginning of the series.

The Resurrection of Christ
Jonas Umbach the Elder German, 1624-1693

Landscape with Hunter and Three Dogs
Jonas Umbach the Elder German, 1624-1693

King Henry of France and Saint Bernard of Clairvaux
Possibly Johann Christoph Lischka (Bohemian, 1650-1712) or Gottfried Bernhard Goetz (German, 1708-1774) or Jonas Umbach the elder (German, 1624-1693)