Abstract
Although the beginnings of universal elementary education had led to
a gradual rise in literacy among the general population, the graphic
arts continued to play a significant role in popular instruction in the
eighteenth century. In fact, the proliferation of books, newspapers, and
other printed matter only increased the demand for illustrations. In
this scene, a vendor presents an assortment of copperplate engravings to
a peasant couple and their son. Whereas townspeople could obtain art
prints from booksellers and art dealers, rural dwellers had to rely on
itinerant vendors. The eighteenth century produced numerous master
engravers, one of the most famous being Daniel Chodowiecki (1726-1801),
whose works depicted virtually all aspects of German life during the
reign of Frederick II (“the Great”) of Prussia (r. 1740-86).