Artwork Page for Bacchanal with a Wine Vat

Details / Information for Bacchanal with a Wine Vat

Bacchanal with a Wine Vat

1470–80
(Italian, about 1431–1506)
Medium
engraving
Measurements
Sheet: 30 x 43.8 cm (11 13/16 x 17 1/4 in.)
Credit Line
Catalogue raisonné
Hind 4
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view
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Did You Know?

Philosophers and moralists cautioned against drinking straight from the vat, because, as Bacchus's exalted pose suggests, only a god could handle such an intoxicating drink. Mere mortals usually mixed their wine with water until the 1800s.

Description

Andrea Mantegna was among the first artists in Italy to produce engravings. His scene of a bacchanalia, a wine-fueled festival of ancient Rome, is composed as if on a shallow stage, attesting to Mantegna’s interest in relief-carved Roman sarcophagi (stone coffins). Standing with his horn of plenty, Bacchus is in control of his senses. The mortals around him falter from too much drink. When Mantegna began making engravings in the 1470s, he was among the first to use the technique to reproduce drawings. Many of Mantegna’s engravings show printing imperfections, the result of a shallowly carved printing plate and ink that did not adhere evenly to the paper.
A horizontally oriented print in black ink on beige paper depicts twelve light-skinned figures around a wooden wine vat. On the left, one man carries another reaching for grapes beside a cornucopia. Centrally, a crowned satyr sits atop the vat, cradling a reclining figure beneath hanging grapevines. To the right, two men drink from curved horns. Chubby children appear throughout, including one climbing the vat and two resting in the foreground.

Bacchanal with a Wine Vat

1470–80

Andrea Mantegna

(Italian, about 1431–1506)
Italy, 15th century

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