The Fall of Adam and Eve

Cleveland Museum of Art

The Fall of Adam and Eve

Hans Burgkmair

Date
1525, printed later
Medium
woodcut on eight sheets of paper
Culture
Germany
Department
Prints
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

This story of Adam and Eve occurs in a tropical location, placing the Garden of Eden closer to what viewers may have believed to be its true location. Palm trees were also associated with human virtues in devotional literature of the time. The artist’s version of the Genesis story places the blame for human transgression squarely on Eve, who appears to persuade Adam to partake of the fruit, while a monkey, a symbol of bodily pleasure, mimics the humans by bringing fruit to its mouth. Since they were often hung on walls, like paintings, prints of this size rarely survive. In this second state of the print, Eve's nudity was covered with an olive leaf.

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