Daniel Nikolaus Chodowiecki,
The Improvement of
Morals, an etching
Germany, AD 1786
Satirizing the attempts of a Berlin publisher
to improve public morals
By the age of 60, Chodowiecki (1726-1801) had
been the most successful printmaker in Berlin for some twenty
years. His professional standing was such that he helped reorganise
the Berlin Academy of Art, of which he later became director. When
a Berlin publisher issued a series of prints aimed at improving
public morals, a field he had already claimed as his own,
Chodowiecki issued this plate to mock the upstart's
presumption.
Chodowiecki
shows his rival on a raised platform pointing to thirteen prints
that illustrate contemporary conduct: a ball, a play, skating,
theft, murder, divorce, etc. Neither he nor the small crowd notice
the scenes of human folly visible in the background, that are
recorded by two draughtsmen. On the left they include different
forms of suicide, a duel, and a balloonist falling to his
death.
Chodowiecki was
largely self taught as an etcher, and his technique of dots,
flicks, parallel lines and
cross-hatching
is free from the conventions of contemporary engraving. At his
death he owned a collection of 12,000 prints, including 200 by
Callot, who seems to have inspired his observation of the figures
around this platform. The dog stealing from a basket on the right
is a quotation from Hogarth.
F. Carey and A. Griffiths, German printmaking in the age, exh. cat. (London, The British Museum Press, 1994)