Curator

  • Art Institute Chicago
  • Harvard art museum
  • My Exhibition
A work made of woodcut in black hand colored with brush and watercolor on cream laid paper, laid down on cream laid paper.

The Way of Salvation

c. 1490

Artist unknown German, active c. 1490

Germany

A pair of prints from opposite sides of the Alps demonstrates the didactic capabilities of devotional printmaking. Both depict a sacred mountain that the soul must climb toward heaven. In Baccio Baldini’s extremely early engraved book illustration of an Italianate ladder of virtues, a monk successfully ascends, while a fashionable young man is dragged away by a demon representing worldly pleasures. Its thistle-laden German counterpart consists of banderole rungs filled with xylographic text and a crowned Christ waiting in glory. A nun kneeling at the bottom may have commissioned the print. She envisions a torturous journey up the steep incline, her twelve-step program advocating different Christian virtues: faith, generosity, modesty, constancy, justice, strength, will, patience, obedience, humility and at long last, divinity.

Woodcut in black hand colored with brush and watercolor on cream laid paper, laid down on cream laid paper

Prints and Drawings