Artwork Page for The Little Executioner

Details / Information for The Little Executioner

The Little Executioner

1662
(German, 1619–1682)
(Spanish, 1591–1652)
Culture
Germany
Medium
mezzotint
Catalogue raisonné
Smith IV.1773.7
State
I/I
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

Prince Ruprecht of the Rhine—a nobleman who was the nephew of England’s King Charles I—was among the earliest practitioners of mezzotint, a printmaking technique first used in Germany in the 1600s. Prince Ruprecht is credited with bringing the technique to England around 1660, where he introduced it to John Evelyn, who was engaged in writing a book on the history of printmaking. Ruprecht created this image (after a painting thought to be by Jusepe de Ribera) to illustrate the mezzotint process in Evelyn’s book, making it the first mezzotint printed in England.
A dark-inked mezzotint portrait depicts a man in profile emerging from solid darkness. A light turban, knotted at the back, contrasts with his full, dark beard receding into shadow. Light glints on his forehead, nose bridge, and ear, illuminating him against the ink-heavy background. His wrapped garment is barely visible against the surrounding gloom. A small, stylized crown emblem occupies the upper right corner of this tightly cropped print.

The Little Executioner

1662

Prince Ruprecht, Jusepe de Ribera

(German, 1619–1682), (Spanish, 1591–1652)
Germany

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