Hunting big game, including wild boar, was a privilege of the aristocracy and was one of the most popular sporting pleasures at the court of Saxony. The bagged game was considered a trophy, which might explain the individualized depiction of the animals. In addition to this depiction of an unusually spotted and a grayish-brown wild boar, the Kupferstich-Kabinett in Dresden once possessed another drawing, lost during World War II, of a black wild boar of the same size and technique (inv. no. C 2175) from the Cranach workshop’s collection of model drawings. As court painter to the elector, Lucas Cranach was commissioned to produce a number of hunting pictures, for which such naturalistic animal studies may have served as preparation.