
Getty Museum
A Falconer in a Landscape
Creator
Monogrammist MSGerman Artist · 1557–present
All works by this person →Scholars know nothing about the artist who has been identified as Monogrammist M.S., aside from his style on his only identified work, the drawing owned by the Getty Museum. This drawing's style, consisting of crisp black outlines with little hatching, is very close to that of Augustin Hirschvogel, an important younger artist of the Danube School. While the Danube School artists each worked indepe
More on Getty ULAN- Date
- 1557
- Medium
- Pen and black ink
- Culture
- German
- Department
- Drawings
- Institution
- Getty Museum
The Monogrammist M.S. is known only from his signature on this drawing. A horse awaits at the right, while a falconer and his royal dog lure back the falcon, shown bent over his prey. Crisp black outlines with small hatchings represent light and shadow and give three-dimensional form to the land, trees, and figures. In an approach typical of the 1500s, layers, or strips of land that together build a sense of depth, show the recession from foreground to background. To emphasize the vast distance of the mountains and town in the background, the Monogrammist M.S. sketched in only the barest of outlines indicating the far-off trees with tiny ovals. The drawing's high level of finish and prominent monogram and date indicate that he may have made it as a gift for a friend. Hunting scenes of this type were extremely popular in German art of the 1500s. By the Middle Ages, falconry, the art of using birds of prey (falcons, hawks, and sometimes eagles) to hunt game, had become a favorite pastime of wealthy aristocrats in Western Europe.
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