1739
Quodlibet on the death of Weinh
(after 1739)
The quodlibet is dedicated to the memory of the wine merchant Georg Graff.
As in a "specimen sheet" of his skill, the text excerpts and notes are executed in a wide variety of hand and printed script.
In the centre above the central scene of a banquet, Georg Graff's life data are noted on a torn-out piece of paper. In the centre is the depiction of a banquet with the caption: "Yes, Lord! yet the little dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from their masters' tables. Math: XV" (Matthew 15:27). In the depiction, there is a begging little dog with the artist's initials: C.L.K.(!) in the left field of the picture at the edge of the table, an unexpectedly self-deprecating depiction.
At the right-hand table in the scene are six needy schoolboys, for whom Georg Graf had donated a beneficium. This included the depicted meal for the pupils at his expense in his house, a contrasting situation to the scene of poor Lazarus and the rich man in the upper left of the quodlibet. The charitable endowment was carried on by Graff's son-in-law, the wine merchant Samuel Veit Juncker.
Theo Noll
Location: Museums of the City of Nuremberg, Art Collections, Inv.-Nr. Nor.K. 6102-245 cm
Design: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Realization: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Material: Mixed media on paper, sheet: 32 x 45.3 cm
photo 2019,
1739
upper left corner
Quodlibet on the death of Weinh
(after 1739)
The quodlibet is dedicated to the memory of the wine merchant Georg Graff.
As in a "specimen sheet" of his skill, the text excerpts and notes are executed in a wide variety of hand and printed script.
In the centre above the central scene of a banquet, Georg Graff's life data are noted on a torn-out piece of paper. In the centre is the depiction of a banquet with the caption: "Yes, Lord! yet the little dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from their masters' tables. Math: XV" (Matthew 15:27). In the depiction, there is a begging little dog with the artist's initials: C.L.K.(!) in the left field of the picture at the edge of the table, an unexpectedly self-deprecating depiction.
At the right-hand table in the scene are six needy schoolboys, for whom Georg Graf had donated a beneficium. This included the depicted meal for the pupils at his expense in his house, a contrasting situation to the scene of poor Lazarus and the rich man in the upper left of the quodlibet. The charitable endowment was carried on by Graff's son-in-law, the wine merchant Samuel Veit Juncker.
Theo Noll
Location: Museums of the City of Nuremberg, Art Collections, Inv.-Nr. Nor.K. 6102-245 cm
Design: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Realization: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Material: Mixed media on paper, sheet: 32 x 45.3 cm
photo 2019,
1739
In the centre above the central scene of a feast, the dates of Georg Graff's life are written on a torn-out piece of paper, as if it were an inscription cartouche.
Quodlibet on the death of Weinh
(after 1739)
The quodlibet is dedicated to the memory of the wine merchant Georg Graff.
As in a "specimen sheet" of his skill, the text excerpts and notes are executed in a wide variety of hand and printed script.
In the centre above the central scene of a banquet, Georg Graff's life data are noted on a torn-out piece of paper. In the centre is the depiction of a banquet with the caption: "Yes, Lord! yet the little dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from their masters' tables. Math: XV" (Matthew 15:27). In the depiction, there is a begging little dog with the artist's initials: C.L.K.(!) in the left field of the picture at the edge of the table, an unexpectedly self-deprecating depiction.
At the right-hand table in the scene are six needy schoolboys, for whom Georg Graf had donated a beneficium. This included the depicted meal for the pupils at his expense in his house, a contrasting situation to the scene of poor Lazarus and the rich man in the upper left of the quodlibet. The charitable endowment was carried on by Graff's son-in-law, the wine merchant Samuel Veit Juncker.
Theo Noll
Location: Museums of the City of Nuremberg, Art Collections, Inv.-Nr. Nor.K. 6102-245 cm
Design: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Realization: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Material: Mixed media on paper, sheet: 32 x 45.3 cm
photo 2019,
1739
Portrait of the wine merchant drawn by his own son Salomon Graf (d. 1737). The engraving was executed by J. W. Stör (see Wolfenbüttel portrait index). I would like to thank Ursula Timann for this important reference.
Quodlibet on the death of Weinh
(after 1739)
The quodlibet is dedicated to the memory of the wine merchant Georg Graff.
As in a "specimen sheet" of his skill, the text excerpts and notes are executed in a wide variety of hand and printed script.
In the centre above the central scene of a banquet, Georg Graff's life data are noted on a torn-out piece of paper. In the centre is the depiction of a banquet with the caption: "Yes, Lord! yet the little dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from their masters' tables. Math: XV" (Matthew 15:27). In the depiction, there is a begging little dog with the artist's initials: C.L.K.(!) in the left field of the picture at the edge of the table, an unexpectedly self-deprecating depiction.
At the right-hand table in the scene are six needy schoolboys, for whom Georg Graf had donated a beneficium. This included the depicted meal for the pupils at his expense in his house, a contrasting situation to the scene of poor Lazarus and the rich man in the upper left of the quodlibet. The charitable endowment was carried on by Graff's son-in-law, the wine merchant Samuel Veit Juncker.
Theo Noll
Location: Museums of the City of Nuremberg, Art Collections, Inv.-Nr. Nor.K. 6102-245 cm
Design: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Realization: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Material: Mixed media on paper, sheet: 32 x 45.3 cm
photo 2019,
1739
upper right corner
Quodlibet on the death of Weinh
(after 1739)
The quodlibet is dedicated to the memory of the wine merchant Georg Graff.
As in a "specimen sheet" of his skill, the text excerpts and notes are executed in a wide variety of hand and printed script.
In the centre above the central scene of a banquet, Georg Graff's life data are noted on a torn-out piece of paper. In the centre is the depiction of a banquet with the caption: "Yes, Lord! yet the little dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from their masters' tables. Math: XV" (Matthew 15:27). In the depiction, there is a begging little dog with the artist's initials: C.L.K.(!) in the left field of the picture at the edge of the table, an unexpectedly self-deprecating depiction.
At the right-hand table in the scene are six needy schoolboys, for whom Georg Graf had donated a beneficium. This included the depicted meal for the pupils at his expense in his house, a contrasting situation to the scene of poor Lazarus and the rich man in the upper left of the quodlibet. The charitable endowment was carried on by Graff's son-in-law, the wine merchant Samuel Veit Juncker.
Theo Noll
Location: Museums of the City of Nuremberg, Art Collections, Inv.-Nr. Nor.K. 6102-245 cm
Design: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Realization: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Material: Mixed media on paper, sheet: 32 x 45.3 cm
photo 2019,
1739
Group of "quodlibet notes" at the middle left margin. On the lower left, the "birth certificate" of the daughter Anna from 1694.
Quodlibet on the death of Weinh
(after 1739)
The quodlibet is dedicated to the memory of the wine merchant Georg Graff.
As in a "specimen sheet" of his skill, the text excerpts and notes are executed in a wide variety of hand and printed script.
In the centre above the central scene of a banquet, Georg Graff's life data are noted on a torn-out piece of paper. In the centre is the depiction of a banquet with the caption: "Yes, Lord! yet the little dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from their masters' tables. Math: XV" (Matthew 15:27). In the depiction, there is a begging little dog with the artist's initials: C.L.K.(!) in the left field of the picture at the edge of the table, an unexpectedly self-deprecating depiction.
At the right-hand table in the scene are six needy schoolboys, for whom Georg Graf had donated a beneficium. This included the depicted meal for the pupils at his expense in his house, a contrasting situation to the scene of poor Lazarus and the rich man in the upper left of the quodlibet. The charitable endowment was carried on by Graff's son-in-law, the wine merchant Samuel Veit Juncker.
Theo Noll
Location: Museums of the City of Nuremberg, Art Collections, Inv.-Nr. Nor.K. 6102-245 cm
Design: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Realization: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Material: Mixed media on paper, sheet: 32 x 45.3 cm
photo 2019,
1739
Central scene depicting a feast. Caption: "Yes, Lord, but the little dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from their masters' tables. Math: XV" (Matthew 15:27).
Quodlibet on the death of Weinh
(after 1739)
The quodlibet is dedicated to the memory of the wine merchant Georg Graff.
As in a "specimen sheet" of his skill, the text excerpts and notes are executed in a wide variety of hand and printed script.
In the centre above the central scene of a banquet, Georg Graff's life data are noted on a torn-out piece of paper. In the centre is the depiction of a banquet with the caption: "Yes, Lord! yet the little dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from their masters' tables. Math: XV" (Matthew 15:27). In the depiction, there is a begging little dog with the artist's initials: C.L.K.(!) in the left field of the picture at the edge of the table, an unexpectedly self-deprecating depiction.
At the right-hand table in the scene are six needy schoolboys, for whom Georg Graf had donated a beneficium. This included the depicted meal for the pupils at his expense in his house, a contrasting situation to the scene of poor Lazarus and the rich man in the upper left of the quodlibet. The charitable endowment was carried on by Graff's son-in-law, the wine merchant Samuel Veit Juncker.
Theo Noll
Location: Museums of the City of Nuremberg, Art Collections, Inv.-Nr. Nor.K. 6102-245 cm
Design: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Realization: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Material: Mixed media on paper, sheet: 32 x 45.3 cm
photo 2019,
1739
central scene with the begging dog is a direct reference to the title of the picture.
Quodlibet on the death of Weinh
(after 1739)
The quodlibet is dedicated to the memory of the wine merchant Georg Graff.
As in a "specimen sheet" of his skill, the text excerpts and notes are executed in a wide variety of hand and printed script.
In the centre above the central scene of a banquet, Georg Graff's life data are noted on a torn-out piece of paper. In the centre is the depiction of a banquet with the caption: "Yes, Lord! yet the little dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from their masters' tables. Math: XV" (Matthew 15:27). In the depiction, there is a begging little dog with the artist's initials: C.L.K.(!) in the left field of the picture at the edge of the table, an unexpectedly self-deprecating depiction.
At the right-hand table in the scene are six needy schoolboys, for whom Georg Graf had donated a beneficium. This included the depicted meal for the pupils at his expense in his house, a contrasting situation to the scene of poor Lazarus and the rich man in the upper left of the quodlibet. The charitable endowment was carried on by Graff's son-in-law, the wine merchant Samuel Veit Juncker.
Theo Noll
Location: Museums of the City of Nuremberg, Art Collections, Inv.-Nr. Nor.K. 6102-245 cm
Design: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Realization: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Material: Mixed media on paper, sheet: 32 x 45.3 cm
photo 2019,
1739
The initials of the artist (!) are written under the little dog. The continuous hem of the skirt of the figure at the back above the dog's chest suggests that it was added later when the print was composed.
Quodlibet on the death of Weinh
(after 1739)
The quodlibet is dedicated to the memory of the wine merchant Georg Graff.
As in a "specimen sheet" of his skill, the text excerpts and notes are executed in a wide variety of hand and printed script.
In the centre above the central scene of a banquet, Georg Graff's life data are noted on a torn-out piece of paper. In the centre is the depiction of a banquet with the caption: "Yes, Lord! yet the little dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from their masters' tables. Math: XV" (Matthew 15:27). In the depiction, there is a begging little dog with the artist's initials: C.L.K.(!) in the left field of the picture at the edge of the table, an unexpectedly self-deprecating depiction.
At the right-hand table in the scene are six needy schoolboys, for whom Georg Graf had donated a beneficium. This included the depicted meal for the pupils at his expense in his house, a contrasting situation to the scene of poor Lazarus and the rich man in the upper left of the quodlibet. The charitable endowment was carried on by Graff's son-in-law, the wine merchant Samuel Veit Juncker.
Theo Noll
Location: Museums of the City of Nuremberg, Art Collections, Inv.-Nr. Nor.K. 6102-245 cm
Design: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Realization: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Material: Mixed media on paper, sheet: 32 x 45.3 cm
photo 2019,
1739
Group of "quodlibet notes" at the middle right margin of the sheet. In the upper right scene, we see the son-in-law S.V. Juncker accompanied by his relative being robbed in 1739.
Quodlibet on the death of Weinh
(after 1739)
The quodlibet is dedicated to the memory of the wine merchant Georg Graff.
As in a "specimen sheet" of his skill, the text excerpts and notes are executed in a wide variety of hand and printed script.
In the centre above the central scene of a banquet, Georg Graff's life data are noted on a torn-out piece of paper. In the centre is the depiction of a banquet with the caption: "Yes, Lord! yet the little dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from their masters' tables. Math: XV" (Matthew 15:27). In the depiction, there is a begging little dog with the artist's initials: C.L.K.(!) in the left field of the picture at the edge of the table, an unexpectedly self-deprecating depiction.
At the right-hand table in the scene are six needy schoolboys, for whom Georg Graf had donated a beneficium. This included the depicted meal for the pupils at his expense in his house, a contrasting situation to the scene of poor Lazarus and the rich man in the upper left of the quodlibet. The charitable endowment was carried on by Graff's son-in-law, the wine merchant Samuel Veit Juncker.
Theo Noll
Location: Museums of the City of Nuremberg, Art Collections, Inv.-Nr. Nor.K. 6102-245 cm
Design: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Realization: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Material: Mixed media on paper, sheet: 32 x 45.3 cm
photo 2019,
1739
lower left corner
Quodlibet on the death of Weinh
(after 1739)
The quodlibet is dedicated to the memory of the wine merchant Georg Graff.
As in a "specimen sheet" of his skill, the text excerpts and notes are executed in a wide variety of hand and printed script.
In the centre above the central scene of a banquet, Georg Graff's life data are noted on a torn-out piece of paper. In the centre is the depiction of a banquet with the caption: "Yes, Lord! yet the little dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from their masters' tables. Math: XV" (Matthew 15:27). In the depiction, there is a begging little dog with the artist's initials: C.L.K.(!) in the left field of the picture at the edge of the table, an unexpectedly self-deprecating depiction.
At the right-hand table in the scene are six needy schoolboys, for whom Georg Graf had donated a beneficium. This included the depicted meal for the pupils at his expense in his house, a contrasting situation to the scene of poor Lazarus and the rich man in the upper left of the quodlibet. The charitable endowment was carried on by Graff's son-in-law, the wine merchant Samuel Veit Juncker.
Theo Noll
Location: Museums of the City of Nuremberg, Art Collections, Inv.-Nr. Nor.K. 6102-245 cm
Design: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Realization: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Material: Mixed media on paper, sheet: 32 x 45.3 cm
photo 2019,
1739
Middle lower group of "Quodlibetnotes". On the lower left, the death notice of Georg Graff's wife and above her portrait with her year of birth and age at the time of depiction.
Quodlibet on the death of Weinh
(after 1739)
The quodlibet is dedicated to the memory of the wine merchant Georg Graff.
As in a "specimen sheet" of his skill, the text excerpts and notes are executed in a wide variety of hand and printed script.
In the centre above the central scene of a banquet, Georg Graff's life data are noted on a torn-out piece of paper. In the centre is the depiction of a banquet with the caption: "Yes, Lord! yet the little dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from their masters' tables. Math: XV" (Matthew 15:27). In the depiction, there is a begging little dog with the artist's initials: C.L.K.(!) in the left field of the picture at the edge of the table, an unexpectedly self-deprecating depiction.
At the right-hand table in the scene are six needy schoolboys, for whom Georg Graf had donated a beneficium. This included the depicted meal for the pupils at his expense in his house, a contrasting situation to the scene of poor Lazarus and the rich man in the upper left of the quodlibet. The charitable endowment was carried on by Graff's son-in-law, the wine merchant Samuel Veit Juncker.
Theo Noll
Location: Museums of the City of Nuremberg, Art Collections, Inv.-Nr. Nor.K. 6102-245 cm
Design: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Realization: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Material: Mixed media on paper, sheet: 32 x 45.3 cm
photo 2019,
1739
lower right corner
Quodlibet on the death of Weinh
(after 1739)
The quodlibet is dedicated to the memory of the wine merchant Georg Graff.
As in a "specimen sheet" of his skill, the text excerpts and notes are executed in a wide variety of hand and printed script.
In the centre above the central scene of a banquet, Georg Graff's life data are noted on a torn-out piece of paper. In the centre is the depiction of a banquet with the caption: "Yes, Lord! yet the little dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from their masters' tables. Math: XV" (Matthew 15:27). In the depiction, there is a begging little dog with the artist's initials: C.L.K.(!) in the left field of the picture at the edge of the table, an unexpectedly self-deprecating depiction.
At the right-hand table in the scene are six needy schoolboys, for whom Georg Graf had donated a beneficium. This included the depicted meal for the pupils at his expense in his house, a contrasting situation to the scene of poor Lazarus and the rich man in the upper left of the quodlibet. The charitable endowment was carried on by Graff's son-in-law, the wine merchant Samuel Veit Juncker.
Theo Noll
Location: Museums of the City of Nuremberg, Art Collections, Inv.-Nr. Nor.K. 6102-245 cm
Design: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Realization: Kaulitz, Christian Ludwig
Material: Mixed media on paper, sheet: 32 x 45.3 cm
photo 2019,
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