The Seven Acts of Mercy: Freeing the Prisoners

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The Seven Acts of Mercy: Freeing the Prisoners

Creator

Pieter Cornelisz. Kunst

Dutch Artist · 1489–1561

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Far more is known about Pieter Cornelisz. Kunst's life than about what his art actually looked like. The eldest son of Cornelis Engebrechtsz., a prominent Leiden painter, Cornelisz. trained under his father. Around 1508 he was probably also influenced by an important fellow pupil, Lucas van Leyden, who quickly developed into one of the Netherlands' finest engravers. The influence may have been som

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Date
1532
Medium
Pen and black and brown ink over black chalk
Culture
Dutch
Department
Drawings
Institution
Getty Museum

To secure the release of the prisoners on the left, a generous man hands a coin to an official holding a long rod. A guard unlocks the shackles from a man crouched on the ground, while two more wait to be liberated from the stocks. In the darkness above their heads a candle gleams brightly, contrasting with the desolate vignette of the gallows in the upper right. The drawing shows one of the Seven Acts of Mercy described by Christ in the Bible, through which the righteous would be saved at the Last Judgment. Pieter Cornelisz. Kunst decided to eliminate the figure of Christ from the scene and to fill it instead with contemporary figures. Both the official and the kind stranger wear garments possessed by most middle-class merchants in the Netherlands in the 1500s: long overcoats shaped like a clergyman's cassock over a short tunic and hose. The artist also used clear gestures and facial expressions to silently convey the narrative content. He prepared this design for a stained-glass window.

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