Artwork Page for Dance of Death: The Miser

Details / Information for Dance of Death: The Miser

Dance of Death: The Miser

c. 1526
(German, active England and Switzerland, 1497/98–1543)
Culture
Germany
Medium
woodcut
Catalogue raisonné
Passavant vol.3.366.27
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

Dance of Death is the most celebrated series of woodcuts designed by Holbein. The forty-one blocks were cut by Hans Lützelburger in the years immediately before his death in 1526, though the set was not published until 1538. Dance of Death originated as a drama in the middle of the 14th century. Following widespread epidemics such as the black plague, these plays took place in a cemetery or churchyard. Actors, dressed in pale costumes painted to resemble skeletons, personified Death and summoned a group of people from all social classes in a dancelike procession. In a period when the life span was short, the purpose of the Dance of Death was to remind the populace to prepare for the Last Judgement.
A vertically oriented print in black ink on cream paper depicts an interior where a bearded man recoils at a table on the left. Opposite him, a skeleton reaches for piles of coins while holding a platter of treasure. Locked chests and bags fill the foreground. Fine cross-hatching shades the scene, and German text at the top reads "Der Rych man."

Dance of Death: The Miser

c. 1526

Hans Holbein the Younger

(German, active England and Switzerland, 1497/98–1543)
Germany

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