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  1. Apr 17, 2018 · The Dance of Death by the German artist Hans Holbein (1497–1543) is a great, grim triumph of Renaissance woodblock printing. In a series of action-packed scenes Death intrudes on the everyday lives of thirty-four people from various levels of society — from pope to physician to ploughman.

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  2. A Danse Macabre painting may show a round dance headed by Death or, more usually, a chain of alternating dead and live dancers. From the highest ranks of the mediaeval hierarchy (usually pope and emperor) descending to its lowest (beggar, peasant, and child), each mortal's hand is taken by an animated skeleton or cadaver.

  3. Totentanz. motif. dance of death, medieval allegorical concept of the all-conquering and equalizing power of death, expressed in the drama, poetry, music, and visual arts of western Europe mainly in the late Middle Ages. Strictly speaking, it is a literary or pictorial representation of a procession or dance of both living and dead figures, the ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Oct 11, 2017 · Inspired by the painting in Paris, more depictions of the Dance of Death popped up over the course of the 1400s. According to the art historian Elina Gertsman, the imagery first spread...

    • Bethany Corriveau Gotschall
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  5. Nov 20, 2021 · The Danse Macabre, or Macchabaeorum Chorea in Latin, represents the pinnacle of horrific depictions of death in late medieval art, with its decaying bodies and skeletons. Initially present in late 13th-century literature, the Danse Macabre is an allegory of Death.

  6. 4 days ago · The Dance of Death. Annotation. Children are not frequent subjects of medieval art, but the figure of the child does occur in a medieval artistic and literary form known as the Danse macabre or Dance of the Dead.

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  8. As with his portraits, Holbein used specific emblems and objects to represent various members of society as Death leads them—passively, comically, or mockingly— in the dance. In the dance of death, an allegory common in medieval and Renaissance Europe, a skeleton “dances” with all members of society—from pope to peasant—as a ...

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