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paper (fiber product)29 × 21 Cm
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About the artwork
Artist supplied description.
This engraving hauntingly illustrates the proverb that the big fish always eats the little fish. Starting with the larger-than-life fish at its center, the image teems with grotesque activity, as bodies spill out of other bodies and hybrid creatures walk and fly about. Pieter Bruegel seems to take a dim view of humanity here, one of disgust at its seemingly endless capacity to cannibalize itself. This is epitomized in the hybrid fish-person at left carrying off its prize, another fish, in its gaping mouth. In the foreground, a man directs a child’s gaze toward the scene, telling him to “behold” (ecce) the proverbial truth on display.
Artwork metadata
Structured fields synced from connected systems.
| Medium | paper (fiber product) |
| Dimensions | 29 × 21 Cm |
| Certificate | Certificate not provided |
Timeline
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Tue
27
Jan
note
Unknown collector, possibly Gaston de Ramaix [stamp (Lugt 4099) verso, lower right, in black ink]....
Unknown collector, possibly Gaston de Ramaix [stamp (Lugt 4099) verso, lower right, in black ink]. Sold by Hill-Stone, Inc., South Dartmouth, Mass, to the Art Institute of Chicago, 2016.
© Artist-Unknown. All rights reserved.
