Artwork Page for The Cook and His Wife

Details / Information for The Cook and His Wife

The Cook and His Wife

probably 1497
(German, 1471–1528)
Medium
engraving
Catalogue raisonné
Meder 85
Public Domain
You can copy, modify, and distribute this work, all without asking permission. Learn more about CMA's Open Access Initiative.
Location
Not on view

Description

Dürer’s curious engraving relates a comical story about the exposure of womanly deception. This housewife, identified by her clothing and the key and purse at her hip, had eaten an eel that her husband was saving. Although she denied it, her pet magpie, a bird associated with idle chatter, witnessed her deviousness and tattled. In revenge, she plucked the bird’s head bare and each time the magpie saw a bald man, the bird asked whether the man had also been telling the story of the eel. Even without knowing the narrative, the wife’s calculating glance toward the viewer and her husband’s dimwitted gluttonous appearance communicates the woman’s sense of superiority, but also her cunning.
A vertically oriented engraving in black ink depicts a stout man and a woman with light skin tones standing side-by-side. On our left, the man stands with legs crossed, holding a long-handled pan; a bird perches on his shoulder near his slightly open mouth. The woman on our right wears a long gown and a large, rounded headpiece. Dense hatched lines define their figures. A monogram sits at the bottom center.

The Cook and His Wife

probably 1497

Albrecht Dürer

(German, 1471–1528)
Germany, late 15th-early 16th Century

See Also

Visually Similar by AI

Contact Us

The information about this object, including provenance, may not be currently accurate. If you notice a mistake or have additional information about this object, please fill out the appropriate request form linked below:

Update or Correct Artwork Information

Imagery or Rights for Non-Open-Access Artworks

Report a Website Issue

Further Questions About This Artwork