1/13
[ stop the slideshow ]

Master of the Year 1446. Christ Nailed to the Cross

Master of the Year 1446. Christ Nailed to the Cross.jpg ThumbnailsMaster of the Playing Cards. Man of SorrowsThumbnailsMaster of the Playing Cards. Man of SorrowsThumbnailsMaster of the Playing Cards. Man of SorrowsThumbnailsMaster of the Playing Cards. Man of SorrowsThumbnailsMaster of the Playing Cards. Man of SorrowsThumbnailsMaster of the Playing Cards. Man of SorrowsThumbnailsMaster of the Playing Cards. Man of Sorrows

Size of the original engraving, 4⅛ × 3¼ inches
In the Royal Print Room, Berlin

Chief among the engravers who show most clearly the influence of the Master of the Playing Cards is the Master of the Year 1446, so named from the date which appears in the Flagellation. His prints present a more or less primitive appearance, and were it not for this date, one might be tempted, on internal evidence, to assign them to an earlier period. In the Passion series, in particular, many of the figures are more gnome-like than human. Such creatures as the man blowing a horn, in Christ Nailed to the Cross, and the man pulling upon a rope, in the same print, recall to our minds, by an association of ideas, the old German fairy tales.