Jacques Callot
Predecessor to Francisco Goya’s The Disasters of War, the series of 18 etchings by Jacques Callot emerges as the reaction to the atrocities of the Thirty Years’ War (1618–1648)—the longest and most destructive of all religious wars of that time. Callot analyses the grammar of war, describes its subsequent stages, denouncing the ferocity of human nature and the individual’s hopelessness in the face of suffering. One of the hopes that the Enlightenment brought a century later was to end all religious wars.
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Jacques Callot, The Great Miseries of War (Les grandes misères de la guerre): People Dying by the Roadside, 1633
etching
Print Room of the University of Warsaw Library, Inw.zb.d. 5167
etching
Print Room of the University of Warsaw Library, Inw.zb.d. 5167
Jacques Callot
Jacques Callot
