Albrecht Dürer (1471–1528)

Dürer revolutionized printmaking, elevating it to the level of an independent art form. He expanded its tonal and dramatic range, and provided the imagery with a new conceptual foundation.
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Self-portrait, Study of a Hand and a Pillow (recto); Six Studies of Pillows (verso), Albrecht Dürer  German, Pen and brown ink
Albrecht Dürer
1493
Head of a Young Woman, Albrecht Dürer  German, Black chalk highlighted with white chalk (abraded) on green prepared paper.
Albrecht Dürer
1522
Salvator Mundi, Albrecht Dürer  German, Oil on linden
Albrecht Dürer
ca. 1505
The Four Horsemen, from "The Apocalypse", Albrecht Dürer  German, Woodcut
Albrecht Dürer
1498
Woodblock for Samson Rending the Lion, Albrecht Dürer  German, Pear wood
Albrecht Dürer
ca. 1497–98
Samson Rending the Lion, Albrecht Dürer  German, Woodcut
Albrecht Dürer
ca. 1497–98
The Whore of Babylon, from "The Apocalypse", Albrecht Dürer  German, Woodcut
Albrecht Dürer
1498
Standing Male Nude Holding a Bow ("Poynter Apollo"), Albrecht Dürer  German, Pen and brown and black ink
Albrecht Dürer
1501–3
Adam and Eve, Albrecht Dürer  German, Engraving
Albrecht Dürer
1504
Saint John on Patmos, Hans Baldung (called Hans Baldung Grien)  German, Oil, gold, and white metal on spruce
Hans Baldung (called Hans Baldung Grien)
ca. 1511
The Holy Family, Albrecht Dürer  German, Drypoint
Albrecht Dürer
1512–13
Knight, Death, and the Devil, Albrecht Dürer  German, Engraving
Albrecht Dürer
1513
Melencolia I, Albrecht Dürer  German, Engraving
Albrecht Dürer
1514
The Celestial Globe-Southern Hemisphere, Albrecht Dürer  German, Woodcut
Albrecht Dürer
1515
Virgin and Child with Saint Anne, Albrecht Dürer  German, Oil on linden
Albrecht Dürer
probably 1519
Erasmus of Rotterdam, Albrecht Dürer  German, Engraving
Albrecht Dürer
1526
"Alberti Dvreri pictoris et architecti praestantissimi De vrbibvs...", Albrecht Dürer  German, Illustrated book, Paris: Officina Christiani Wecheli, 1535
Albrecht Dürer
1535
A Hedgehog (Erinaceus roumanicus), Hans Hoffmann  German, Watercolor and gouache
Hans Hoffmann
before 1584

A supremely gifted and versatile German artist of the Renaissance period, Albrecht Dürer (1471–1528) was born in the Franconian city of Nuremberg, one of the strongest artistic and commercial centers in Europe during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. He was a brilliant painter, draftsman, and writer, though his first and probably greatest artistic impact was in the medium of printmaking. Dürer apprenticed with his father, who was a goldsmith, and with the local painter Michael Wolgemut, whose workshop produced woodcut illustrations for major books and publications. An admirer of his compatriot Martin Schongauer, Dürer revolutionized printmaking, elevating it to the level of an independent art form. He expanded its tonal and dramatic range, and provided the imagery with a new conceptual foundation. By the age of thirty, Dürer had completed or begun three of his most famous series of woodcuts on religious subjects: The Apocalypse (1498;(), ()), the Large Woodcut Passion cycle (ca. 1497–1500), and the Life of the Virgin (begun 1500). He went on to produce independent prints, such as the engraving Adam and Eve (1504; ()), and small, self-contained groups of images, such as the so-called Meisterstiche (master engravings) featuring Knight, Death, and the Devil (1513; ()), Saint Jerome in His Study (1514), and Melencolia I (1514; ()), which were intended more for connoisseurs and collectors than for popular devotion. Their technical virtuosity, intellectual scope, and psychological depth were unmatched by earlier printed work.

More than any other northern European artist, Dürer was engaged by the artistic practices and theoretical interests of Italy. He visited the country twice, from 1494 to 1495 and again from 1505 to 1507, absorbing firsthand some of the great works of the Italian Renaissance, as well as the classical heritage and theoretical writings of the region. The influence of Venetian color and design can be seen in the Feast of the Rose Garlands altarpiece (1506; Národní Galerie, Prague), commissioned from Dürer by a German colony of merchants living in Venice. Dürer developed a new interest in the human form, as demonstrated by his nude and antique studies. Italian theoretical pursuits also resonated deeply with the artist. He wrote Four Books of Human Proportion (Vier Bücher von menschlichen Proportion), only the first of which was published during his lifetime (1528), as well as an introductory manual of geometric theory for students (Underweysung der Messung, 1525; ()), which includes the first scientific treatment of perspective by a northern European artist.

Dürer’s talent, ambition, and sharp, wide-ranging intellect earned him the attention and friendship of some of the most prominent figures in German society. He became official court artist to Holy Roman Emperors Maximilian I and his successor Charles V, for whom Dürer designed and helped execute a range of artistic projects. In Nuremberg, a vibrant center of humanism and one of the first to officially embrace the principles of the Reformation, Dürer had access to some of Europe’s outstanding theologians and scholars, including Erasmus (), Philipp Melanchthon, and Willibald Pirkheimer, each captured by the artist in shrewd portraits. For Nuremberg’s town hall, the artist painted two panels of the Four Apostles (1526; Alte Pinakothek, Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlungen, Munich), bearing texts in Martin Luther’s translation that pay tribute to the city’s adoption of Lutheranism. Hundreds of surviving drawings, letters, and diary entries document Dürer’s travels through Italy and the Netherlands (1520–21), attesting to his insistently scientific perspective and demanding artistic judgment.

The artist also cast a bold light on his own image through a number of striking self-portraits—drawn, painted, and printed. They reveal an increasingly successful and self-assured master, eager to assert his creative genius and inherent nobility, while still marked by a clear-eyed, often foreboding outlook. They provide us with the cumulative portrait of an extraordinary Northern European artist whose epitaph proclaimed: “Whatever was mortal in Albrecht Dürer lies beneath this mound.”


Contributors

Jacob Wisse
Stern College for Women, Yeshiva University

October 2002


Further Reading

Bartrum, Giulia, et al. Albrecht Dürer and His Legacy: The Graphic Work of a Renaissance Artist. Exhibition catalogue. London: British Museum, 2002.

Boorsch, Suzanne, and Nadine M. Orenstein. "The Print in the North: The Age of Albrecht Dürer and Lucas van Leyden." Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 54, no. 4 (Spring 1997), pp. 3–12. See on MetPublications

Eichberger, Dagmar, and Charles Zika, eds. Dürer and His Culture. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1998.

Panofsky, Erwin. The Life and Art of Albrecht Dürer. Rev. ed. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2005.


Citation

View Citations

Wisse, Jacob. “Albrecht Dürer (1471–1528).” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/durr/hd_durr.htm (October 2002)