The Danse Macabre aimed to confront viewers and readers with the prospect of their own demise by showing how Death summons each and every one of us—whether high or low, young or old, rich or poor. It functioned both as a text and as a visual theme, and often in combination, while also lending itself well to performance. Now best known through the satirical woodcuts of Hans Holbein the Younger, the motif was one of several ‘macabre’ themes that developed alongside the moralising tale of the Three Living and the Three Dead and the stark depiction of the cadaver on tomb monuments.
The Danse Macabre was influenced by earlier themes, but thanks to its versatility its own impact went much further. As this corpus of innovative research will show, the Danse inspired sculptors, portrait artists, authors and dramatists such as Shakespeare far more than has been recognised until now. From the mural in 1420s Paris and John Lydgate’s poem to the subsequent dissemination in print, Mixed Metaphors will reveal the lasting influence of the Danse on European culture from the Middle Ages to the present day.
Stefanie Knöll is a Lecturer and Curator of the graphic collection ‘Mensch und Tod’ at the Heinrich-Heine-University Düsseldorf. She has published widely on tomb monuments, representations of old age, and the Danse Macabre. Among her recent publications is Frauen – Sünde – Tod (2010), an edited volume on women and death. Her current research deals with reproductions of monumental Danse Macabre paintings and the history of art historical writing on the Danse Macabre.