As with many of Dürer's engravings, the intended meaning or source is unclear; although it has been subject to wide scholarly analysis, no real consensus has emerged. Possible interpretations range from the
four seasons and the
four elements, to
Aphrodite (represented here by the woman to the right wearing a myrtle wreath) The art historian Marcel Briton suggests that the work may not have any specific meaning and is simply a portrait of four nudes, "the whim of a young artist annoyed by the puritanical conventionality of his fellow-citizens". and
Diana and Hecate Trivia.
Witchcraft The human skull and bone left on the floor are intended as either reminders of death, The witches may be misogynistically linked to the "Malleus maleficarum" (''The Witches' Hammer'') the "virulent diatribe" written in 1487 by the
Dominican friars and inquisitors
Heinrich Kramer and
Jacob Sprenger. The book endorsed the extermination of witches and so developed a convoluted and detailed legal and theological theory to justify its treatise. In this context, the engraving is sometimes examined alongside The engraving resembles in a number of ways
Hans Baldung Grien's
Bewitched Groom, completed the year before his death in 1545. However, it is important to note that Dürer and Baldung's works, while contemporary with the "Malleus maleficarum", come before the widespread outbreak of moral panic leading to the
witch-hunting of the later 16th and 17th centuries. According to Sullivan, "The work of Direr and Baldung belong to an earlier era, they testify to a different sensibility and were produced by artists who could not have foreseen the terrible times to come"
Classical mythology The most accepted meaning is that the work is an allegorical warning against discord, and its inevitable lead to hell and death. Compositionally, the positioning of the women matches a marble group of the three graces known in the
early Renaissance, and likely Dürer would have seen it from copies. A common interpretation is that figures represent Hecate, who according to the "often represented with three faces or bodies, probably to suggest that she could look in all directions at doorways or crossings". Alternatively, the woman from the second right wearing a wreath may represent
Discordia, the Roman goddess of strife and discord, who threw an apple amongst
Juno,
Minerva and
Venus, igniting the
Trojan War. Or it may be that that woman is being initiated by three witches. The globe hanging above the figures is divided into twelve segments and contains two inscriptions; the year 1497, and, outlined with girdling, and the letters "OGH" - perhaps meaning "Odium generis humani" (
Odium (disgust or ambush) against the human race), or "Oh Gott hüte" (
Oh God Forbid) as suggested in 1675 by the German art-historian and painter
Joachim von Sandrart, or "Ordo Graciarum Horarumque" (
Order of the Graces and Hours). The image has been copied and adapted a number of times. Nicoletto da Modena (1490-1569) produced a version based on the
Judgement of Paris interpretation, changing the inscription on the globe to "Detur Pulchrior" (
To the fairest), and omitted the devil and bones. == Notes ==