Boy Sleeping on a Grave explained

Boy Sleeping on a Grave (German: Knabe auf einem Grab schlafend[1]) is a c. 1803 print designed by the German Romantic painter Caspar David Friedrich, and printed on paper as a woodcut, the block cut by his brother Christian Friedrich, who was a carpenter and furniture maker.[2]

An example in the National Gallery of Canada measures just,[3] and an example in the Metropolitan Museum of Art measures .[4] It is one of four woodcuts designed by Friedrich and cut by his brother around 1803.[2] The wood blocks for three of the prints - Boy sleeping on a grave, Woman with the Spider's Web and Woman with a Raven at an Abyss - are held by the Hamburger Kunsthalle.[2] It was suggested by the German art historian that they were made as illustrations for a book - perhaps a volume of Friedrich's poetry.[2] The three prints were exhibited in Dresden in March 1804.[2] These three illustrations are based on drawings by Friedrich in a sketchbook that he used from September 1800 to March 1802, now known as the Mannheim Sketchbook. Although the pages are now separated, eleven are held by the Kunsthalle Mannheim, but a pen and ink drawing of a sleeping boy (German: Schlafender Knabe) dated to 1802 is held by the Kunsthalle Bremen.[2]

The fourth woodcut is a profile self-portrait of Friedrich, perhaps intended as a frontispiece for the same volume of poetry.[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. https://www.deutsche-digitale-bibliothek.de/item/MLDXFVZ3HPHC242ZTM66QOE53LC5VCNZ Knabe auf einem Grab schlafend
  2. https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/P_1981-0725-2 The woman with the spider's web between bare trunks or Melancholy
  3. https://www.gallery.ca/collection/artwork/boy-sleeping-on-a-grave Boy sleeping on a grave
  4. https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/365635 Knabe auf einem Grab schlafend (Boy sleeping on a grave)