The Cleveland Museum of Art
Collection Online as of March 29, 2024
The Bohemians: The Bohemians Marching: The Rear Guard
c. 1621–1625
(French, 1592–1635)
Sheet: 12.4 x 23.8 cm (4 7/8 x 9 3/8 in.)
John L. Severance Fund 2004.42.a
Catalogue raisonné: Lieure (2) II.23.374
Location: not on view
Description
Jacques Callot, a masterful draftsman, spent the greater part of his life at the ducal courts of Tuscany and Lorraine, where he produced prints to record festivals and theatrical performances. He also executed religious subjects and scenes reflecting many aspects of daily life including war, pervasive in 17th-century Europe. When returning to France from Italy, Callot probably saw bands of rootless men, women, and children-a common sight-which became the subject of The Bohemians. He conceived of these four prints as a long frieze; the lines in each of the sheets extend into the sheet that follows. The first two scenes depict a procession of scrawny horses and disheveled families in tattered, exotic clothing. The last two show these vagrants pillaging a farm and then enjoying a feast. The inscriptions, from left to right, comment on the action: The only things these poor fortune-telling beggars carry with them are things yet to come. Are these not fine messengers, straying through foreign lands? You who take pleasure in their words, watch out for your blancs, testons and pitolles (coins). When all is said and done, they find that their fate is to have come from Egypt to this feast.- Rudolf Peltzer (1825-1910), Lugt 2231; Metropolitan Museum of Art, Lugt 1943; Metropolitan Museum of Art, duplicate (5/27/70), Lugt 1808h suppl., (Tom French)
- {{cite web|title=The Bohemians: The Bohemians Marching: The Rear Guard|url=false|author=Jacques Callot|year=c. 1621–1625|access-date=29 March 2024|publisher=Cleveland Museum of Art}}
Source URL:
https://www.clevelandart.org/art/2004.42.a