Artwork Page for The Adoration of the Shepherds

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The Adoration of the Shepherds

c. 1552
(Italian, c. 1510–1561)
Culture
Italy
Measurements
Platemark: 37.5 x 51 cm (14 3/4 x 20 1/16 in.)
Credit Line
Catalogue raisonné
Bartsch XVI.121.8; Passavant VI, p. 178; Lauder 112, state II/IV
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

Battista Franco was one of Michelangelo’s most devoted followers: his biographer Giorgio Vasari wrote that he drew every figure on the master’s Sistine Chapel ceiling. In Franco’s own works, such as this print, he made new, inventive compositions that emulated Michelangelo without directly copying or quoting his works.

The print depicts the group of shepherds who visited the Christ child shortly after his birth. Franco used twisting, active poses and emphasized anatomy and musculature, creating distinct groups of figures in the foreground and background. Guided by a host of angels, the shepherds’ twisting bodies, pointing gestures, and directional gazes—mirrored by those of an ass and a cow—offer witness to the miraculous birth. Groups of men conversing in the background offer a more intellectual approach to the miracle, while Joseph gazes calmly and contemplatively from the right.
A horizontally oriented engraving in dense black ink fine lines depicts people with light skin tones gathering around the baby Christ. Mary kneels on the left, gesturing toward the infant in a straw basket. On the right, shepherds and a kneeling man surround the child, while an ox and donkey stand behind. Above, six winged figures sit on clouds beneath radiating light. The background features classical ruins and buildings against an even hatched sky shading.

The Adoration of the Shepherds

c. 1552

Battista Franco

(Italian, c. 1510–1561)
Italy

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