
Pulliciniello and Signora Lucretia

Photo Credit: photo: M. Johnston
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Pulliciniello and Signora Lucretia
1622 and later17th century
72 x 95 mm (2.8 x 3.7 in.)
Jacques Callot, French, (1592–1635)
- dance - Performing art form realized in rhythmic movement, creating visual designs by a series of poses and tracing of patterns through space in the course of measured units of time. [November 1994 scope note added. February 1993 related term added.]
- dancers - Use for those who engage in the activity of dancing or who practice the art of dance, especially as a profession. [November 1994 scope note added. February 1993 related term added. November 1992 alternate term added.]
- genre - Use for pictorial representations, which may be in various media, that represent scenes or events from everyday life; usually used with another term such as "paintings" or "prints." [April 1991 descriptor moved.]
- theater (discipline) - Use for the professionally oriented study of theater, involving training, practice, and study in the processes of doing theater. For the academically oriented study of theater, use "drama." [August 1995 descriptor changed, was "theater". April 1993 related term added.]
- townscapes (representations) - Related Term
- plate Dimensions: 72 x 95 mm (2.8 x 3.7 in.)
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(photo: M. Johnston)
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Jacques Callot, French, (1592–1635) . Pulliciniello and Signora Lucretia, 1622 and later. From Dances of Sfessania (Balli di Sfessania). Etching. First of two states. plate : 72 x 95 mm (2.8 x 3.7 in.). DAC accession number 1962.4.1.9. Purchase funds, 1962. Open Access Image from the Davison Art Center, Wesleyan University (photo: M. Johnston) .
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