HOME
What's New Subscribe to Our Web Site Newsletters Calendar of Events Recent Acquisitions Videos and Podcasts About the Gallery Jan Lievens: A Dutch Master Rediscovered Pompeii and the Roman Villa: Art and Culture around the Bay of Naples
Global Navigation Collection Exhibitions Planning a Visit Programs Online Tours Education Resources Gallery Shop Support the Gallery NGA Kids
National Gallery of Art - EXHIBITIONS

image: The Baroque Woodcut, National Gallery of Art – October 28, 2007 to March 30, 2008

This exhibition is no longer on view at the National Gallery. Please follow the links below for related online resources or visit our current exhibitions schedule.

Related Resources

Works by
Titian
Albrecht Dürer
Giuseppe Scolari
Peter Paul Rubens
Jan Lievens
Christoffel Jegher
Guido Reni
Bartolomeo Coriolano
in the Gallery's collection

NGA Backstory: The Baroque Woodcut: Carving a Niche
Step behind the scenes of a world-class museum with host Barbara Tempchin and Peter Parshall, curator and head of old master prints, National Gallery of Art
Listen | iTunes | RSS (7:13 mins.)

View Related Collection Tours
Prints and Drawings

Print Study Rooms

Press Materials

Image: Christoffel Jegher after Sir Peter Paul Rubens, Hercules Fighting the Fury and the Discord, Ailsa Mellon Bruce Fund, 1973.60.1Woodcut in its classic form achieved a final triumph in the Baroque era when painters of exceptional caliber chose it as a dramatic means for expressing the energy and refinement of their draftsmanship. The woodcut offered wide variation in scale and the advantage of printing in colors, and invested a bold element of abstraction into a painterly art of illusion. Most of these works result from close collaboration between a painter and a master block cutter. At their best they reflect a perfect fusion of skill and imagination. Titian, Albrecht Dürer, Giuseppe Scolari, Peter Paul Rubens, Jan Lievens, Christoffel Jegher, Guido Reni, and Bartolomeo Coriolano are represented among the 65 works.

Organization: Organized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington.

Sponsor: The exhibition is supported by a generous grant from the Thaw Charitable Trust.