Revellers enjoying life before they die of plague. Colour lithograph after F. Jenewein, 1900.
- Jenewein, Felix, 1857-1905.
- Date:
- 1901
- Reference:
- 17772i
- Part of:
- The plague : A cycle of six pictures
- Pictures
About this work
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Subject described by Karel B. Mádl as follows: "Madness increases. If [i]t is impossible to stop or to overcome the tyranical invasion of plage [sic], it is better to enjoy, what life can still offer, and to plunge into intoxicating pleasure, as the last remedy against the plague. "By day and by night", says Bocaccio [sic], people flocked into taverns, drinking and revelling, visiting also houses of the worst repute. They made merry, and laughed and jested." That, which Bocaccio [sic] describes with his clever pen Jenewein represents still more powerfully in his picture, the madness and intoxication of bacchantic voluptuousness. The lowest filth came uppermost and spread like a new contagion. There is no shame, no moral feeling; everything is drowned in drunkenness, fornication and blasphemy. How the drummer beats the drum, and the mob of half naked men and women, intoxicated with passion reel and stagger!"
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Location Status Access Closed stores