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Alphabet with Grotesques and Satyrs

French
1546

Medium/Technique Etching and engraving
Dimensions Sheet: 21.6 × 36.3 cm (8 1/2 × 14 5/16 in.); (trimmed within the platemark)
Credit Line James M. and Melinda A. Rabb Acquisition Fund
Accession Number2017.4042
NOT ON VIEW
ClassificationsPrints
Lively alphabets were a specialty of the 16th century, and artists and designers produced many fanciful letter designs, often inhabited by all manner of creatures and people. This single sheet, containing the whole alphabet, is a tour de force of invention and careful planning. The letters, each of which is constructed of a complicated interlace that resembles embroidery, merge and intertwine in a perfectly balanced ballet. The voids within the letters and the spaces between them are occupied by a host of fanciful characters, who seem almost to be cavorting in an alphabetical forest. The sheet is unsigned, but the artist seems likely to have worked in, or at least been strongly influenced by, the artistic circles around the French court at Fontainebleau in the 1540s. The only certain clue to the print’s origins is the date 1546, tucked between Y and Z on a little banderole.

Marks Verso, lower right, stamped in brown ink, the mark of the MFA (Lugt 282)
ProvenanceMay 25, 2017, anonymous sale (auction 109, Druckgraphik des 15.–19. Jahrhundert), Galerie Bassenge, Berlin, lot 5090, to the MFA. (Accession Date: October 11, 2017)