Artist: Barthel Beham (German, 1502-1540).
Title: Mother and Child with a skull and Hourglass
Medium: Antique copper plate Engraving on Laid Paper after the original by Renowned Master Engraver Amand Durand (1831-1905).
Dimensions: Image Size 1 3/4 x 2 5/8 inches.
Framed Dimensions: Approximately 10 x 11 inches.
Framing: This piece has been professionally matted and framed using all new materials.
Mother and child with a skull and hourglass; a mother standing on the left attempting to nurse her apparently dead child which is resting on a table. Next to the naked baby a skull. Above a windowsill with an hourglass, through the window view of a garden and another building.
Barthel Beham (or Bartel) (1502–1540) was a German engraver, miniaturist and painter. The younger brother of Hans Sebald Beham, he was born into a family of artists in Nuremberg. Learning his art from his elder brother, and Albrecht Dürer, he was particularly active as an engraver during the 1520s, creating tiny works of magnificent detail, positioning him in the German printmaking school known as the “Little Masters”. He was also fascinated with antiquity and may have worked with Marcantonio Raimondi in Bologna and Rome at some time in his career. In 1525, along with his brother and Georg Pencz, the so-called “godless painters”, he was banished from Lutheran Nuremberg for asserting his disbelief in baptism, Christ, or transubstantiation. Although later pardoned, he moved to Catholic Munich to work for the Bavarian dukes William IV and Ludwig X. Whilst there, his exceptional talent established him as one of Germany’s principal portrait painters, favoured by distinguished patrons such as Emperor Charles V. According to Joachim von Sandrart, he died in Italy during a trip under the patronage of Duke William.