How To Look Like a 17th-century Woodcut Print

Transform yourself into a seventeenth-century Italian work of art with a step-by-step makeup tutorial and art history lesson on chiaroscuro woodcuts.

Transform yourself into a seventeenth-century Italian work of art. Join Cecilia Zhou, Senior Guide at the Harvard Art Museums, for a step-by-step makeup tutorial and art history lesson on Bartolomeo Coriolano’s chiaroscuro woodcut A sleeping cupid (1630–45). In this tutorial, learn about the precise and complex technique behind chiaroscuro woodcuts through a guided close-looking session, then create your own look with a makeup how-to. Grab your favorite supplies to get started.

© 2021 The Metropolitan Museum of Art


Contributors

Cecilia Zhou
Senior Guide at the Harvard Art Museums

Two women in opulent dress and jewelry sit facing each other on a patterned carpet
Shimmering jewels in Pahari School paintings.
Olivia Dill and Marina Ruiz Molina
May 27
Dark museum display of military-inspired fashion. Mannequins wear red and black attire, surrounded by framed artworks and historical elements. Elegant and solemn.
Video
Monica L. Miller and Andrew Bolton
May 22
Cropped studio portrait of a man in a pinstripe suit, tie, and hat
How is Black dandyism integral to Black identity and the history of fashion?
Monica L. Miller
May 14
More in:FashionInspirationMaterials

A slider containing 1 items.
Press the down key to skip to the last item.
A sleeping cupid, Bartolomeo Coriolano  Italian, Chiaroscuro woodcut in blue-gray and black printed from two blocks
Bartolomeo Coriolano
Guido Reni
1630–45