STUDY ROOM | 15.10.2023 – 28.04.2024
STORYTELLING
The Narrative Power of Printmaking
The advent of printmaking in the fifteenth century revolutionized the dissemination of images. Whereas in the past, for example, altarpieces and paintings were only accessible to a select audience, the new mediums of the woodcut and copperplate engraving suddenly made it possible to produce images relatively quickly, cheaply, and in large editions.
This exhibition in the study room shows how printmaking, with its particular narrative form, helped to make images and the stories they contained accessible to a wider public. Motifs and depictions were increasingly devoted to profane themes, even though the artists and art of the time were still strongly influenced by religion. What purpose did these profane images serve, what zeitgeist do they reflect, and how did the artists manage to convey not only an image but also a message to viewers of the time on just a few square centimeters of paper? While these viewers understood all the hints in the visual language very well, this knowledgeable seeing is often missing today.
For this reason, STORYTELLING invites visitors to (re)discover answers to these questions.
This exhibition in the study room shows how printmaking, with its particular narrative form, helped to make images and the stories they contained accessible to a wider public. Motifs and depictions were increasingly devoted to profane themes, even though the artists and art of the time were still strongly influenced by religion. What purpose did these profane images serve, what zeitgeist do they reflect, and how did the artists manage to convey not only an image but also a message to viewers of the time on just a few square centimeters of paper? While these viewers understood all the hints in the visual language very well, this knowledgeable seeing is often missing today.
For this reason, STORYTELLING invites visitors to (re)discover answers to these questions.