Bacchanal

Description

Giulio Sanuto, an idiosyncratic Venetian engraver, reveled in displaying bacchic musical imagery on a large scale. The flutes, panpipes, cymbals, stomping feet, and twisting bodies seen here mark the rowdy procession as quickly degenerating into chaos. The portly and drunken figures with their pendulous quadruple breasts and other anatomical oddities echo the excesses of the paired Bacchanal friezes by Andrea Mantegna (1956.1010 and .1011), while the intertwined poses of the revelers also suggest Antonio Pollaiuolo’s Battle of the Naked Men (1938.260). The darkening tree cover marks their festivities as a truly ancient ceremony to which mortal viewers should not be privy.

Bacchanal

Giulio Sanuto

c. 1550

Accession Number

220729

Medium

Engraving in black on two sheets of ivory laid paper, joined through the center

Dimensions

Image: 45.1 × 55.4 cm (17 13/16 × 21 13/16 in.); Plate: 45.5 × 55.8 cm (17 15/16 × 22 in.); Sheets: 46.5 × 57.4 cm (18 5/16 × 22 5/8 in.)

Classification

engraving

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

The Amanda S. Johnson and Marion J. Livingston Fund