Artwork Page for The Apocalypse: The Fall of Babylon

Details / Information for The Apocalypse: The Fall of Babylon

The Apocalypse: The Fall of Babylon

1546–1556
(French, 1485–1561)
Medium
engraving
Credit Line
Catalogue raisonné
Eisler 56
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

This print is part of a bound volume of works illustrating the a narrative of the Apocalypse, taken from the Revelation of Saint John in the Bible. The 23 engravings in the series occupied the artist for a number of years and represent his greatest artistic achievement. The museum's volume is one of only seven known complete sets. Jean Duvet was one of the first major printmakers in France and one of the most original artists of the 1500s. Although he worked mostly in the provincial city of Langres, he became aware of Italian art through the circulation of prints—notably those of Marcantonio Raimondi. His solidly modeled human figures reflect the influence of the Italian High Renaissance. Duvet, however, developed an idiosyncratic, highly artificial style with crowded compositions that ignore rational space in favor of ornamental surface patterns.
A vertically oriented engraving in black ink with an arched top depicts Babylon as a woman with light skin falling upside down toward a multi-headed beast. Behind her, a building crumbles beneath a winged figure. To the right, a dense crowd of armored soldiers observes from horseback. A small plaque inscribed "HIST CAP-I-8 APOC" rests near a central column, while a tiny book sits at the bottom right.

The Apocalypse: The Fall of Babylon

1546–1556

Jean Duvet

(French, 1485–1561)
France, 16th century

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