CLEVELAND, OH.- The Renaissance Engraver at Work, the Cleveland Museum of Arts (CMA) newest exhibition, offers visitors a glimpse into the beauty, complexity, and technical innovation of engraving, a printmaking process that emerged in mid-1400s Europe. Drawn exclusively from the CMAs collection, which includes some of the worlds oldest and rarest engravings, the exhibition explores the origins of a medium that transformed the way images were created and duplicated. The Renaissance Engraver at Work, on view from Sunday, July 5, through Sunday, November 1, 2026, in the James and Hanna Bartlett Prints and Drawings Galleries 101AB, is free and open to the public.
In Renaissance Europe, engraving was a new technology, said Emily J. Peters, curator of prints and drawings. Long the domain of goldsmiths, engraved lines appeared as prints on paperpossibly to record metalwork designsin the mid-1400s. The potential of printed engravings quickly became clear: They provided the opportunity to reproduce artworks in other media with unprecedented refinement and to disseminate artistic compositions far and wide.
Yet, the first 50 years of engraving in Europe, between 1450 and 1500, remain only partially understood. Scholars and curators are unsure of what tools early engravers used to cut their plates, how they prepared their plates and inks, or even, in some cases, precisely how they printed their engravings.
To gain new insight into the early engravings on display and the engraving process itself and to advance scholarship on these rare works, paper conservator Moyna Stanton and Peters invited Andrew Raftery, master engraver and printmaking professor at the Rhode Island School of Design, to the CMA. Together, the team examined engravings with the paper labs stereomicroscope and a variety of light sources and magnification, revealing material and technical details not visible to the naked eye. Close examination provided insight into the challenges artists faced in adopting this new technology, tracing moments of experimentation, refinement, and ambition.
Exhibition highlights include the following:
The only known first state of Antonio del Pollaiuolos Battle of the Nudes
A unique impression by Master of the Nuremberg Passion
Works by Master of the E-Series Tarocchi
Madonna Enthroned with Eight Angels by Master ES
Venus Reclining in a Landscape by Venetian engraver Giulio Campagnola
Pairing extraordinary works of art and new technical research, The Renaissance Engraver at Work illuminates the pivotal role of engraving, which has a significant effect on our day-to-day lives.
From US currency and wedding invitations to jewelry, awards, and diplomas, engraving remains part of daily life in ways many people dont even notice, Peters said. This exhibition invites visitors to look closely at the process and appreciate its origins.