The Alchemist
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This print, after a painting by Adriaen van Ostade, shows a humble peasant-alchemist at work before a furnace. Working with a pair of hand bellows—the source of the alchemists' mocking nickname, "puffer,"— the alchemist heats a crucible on a bed of coals. He is plainly dressed in ragged clothes and a heavy apron, surrounded by the remains of broken vessels, tongs and firewood, and a single tattered book. In the background, the alchemist's children play in the mess, while his wife wipes the bottom of a baby—a punning joke on "alchemist" making use of the Dutch phrase "al gemist," or "all is waste."
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| Rights | Public Domain Mark 1.0 |
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Cite as
Bentley, Joseph C. “The Alchemist.” Wove paper, paper (fiber product), n.d. Science History Institute. Philadelphia. https://digital.sciencehistory.org/works/tb09j622s.
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