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Wikimedia Commons · Public domain · Hover to magnify, click for fullscreen
Original fileProportionen des menschlichen Körpers
This is a simple woodcut-style line drawing of a nude, gender-ambiguous human figure standing in a frontal, static pose. The body is outlined in thin black ink, with basic anatomical markers like the navel, knees, and pectoral area indicated by minimalist strokes. Horizontal lines traverse the body at various intervals, each aligned with a specific number on the right side, serving as a grid to mathematically define the heights of different body sections. The figure is set against a background of densely printed Latin text, suggesting this was a page pulled from a larger pedagogical or scientific volume.
This diagram exemplifies the early modern obsession with anthropometry and the 'Vitruvian' quest to find divine or mathematical ratios within the human form. It relates to the intellectual tradition of Renaissance natural philosophy, where the body was viewed as a microcosm reflecting the geometric order of the universe.
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Vitruvius, De Architectura
The image relates to the tradition of 'Vitruvian man,' which seeks to map the ideal proportions of the human body to geometric principles.
Object
woodcut
laid paper
Baroque
German
anatomical
Digital Source
Wikimedia Commons · Public domain
381 × 820 px
Linked Data
AI AI-cataloged fields generated by gemini-3.1-flash-lite-preview on April 20, 2026. Getty identifiers are AI-inferred and may require verification.