Death and the Maiden (Baldung) explained

Death and the Maiden (Death and Lust)
Medium:tempera on limewood
Other Language 1:German: Tod und Mädchen
Artist:Hans Baldung
Year:1517
Height Metric:30.3
Width Metric:14.7
Museum:Kunstmuseum Basel
City:Basel

Death and the Maiden or Death and Lust is a painting executed in 1517 by the German artist Hans Baldung (otherwise known as Hans Baldung Grien) which is in the collection of the Kunstmuseum Basel, Basel, Switzerland.

The work depicts a popular theme that Baldung himself visited several times, that of the early death of a young woman, often with erotic overtones. In this version Death has seized hold of a voluptuous young woman's hair and is pointing down to a tomb in mock benediction. Above his head are written the words "Hie must du yn" or "Here you must go". The distraught victim, fully aware of her fate, wrings her hands together, pleading for her life.[1] [2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Paintings for our time: Death and the Maiden. 5 January 2020. The Eclectic Light Company. 19 June 2020. 17 June 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200617175204/https://eclecticlight.co/2020/01/05/paintings-for-our-time-death-and-the-maiden/. live.
  2. Book: Luyt, Russell. Diversity in Gender and Visual Representation.