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A work made of engraving in black on cream laid paper.

Ornament With Flower and Eight Wild Folk

1490/1500

Israhel van Meckenem the Younger German, c. 1440/45-1503

Germany

Ornament prints with mischievous tiny figures were in such demand in late-15th- and early-16th-century Europe that engravers like Israhel van Meckenem frequently borrowed imagery and entire compositions from other artists. The flower stalk that the naked wild men and women scale comes from a print by an earlier artist, the Master E. S. This print bears an inscription that translates to “The noble bees draw honey from the beautiful flower; from this one however, the frivolous vermin extract a stronger potion.” The ripe blossom thus symbolizes sexual consummation, and the print simultaneously tempts and warns the viewer about “the birds and bees.”

Engraving in black on cream laid paper

Prints and Drawings