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Biography:Albrecht
Dürer
The German painter and graphic artist Albrecht Dürer
(1471-1528) introduced the achievements of the Italian Renaissance into
northern European art. His prints diffused his new style, a fusion of
the German realistic tradition with the Italian ideal of beauty. Until
the end of the 15th century late medieval realism in the north and the
art of the Renaissance in Italy developed more or less independently of
each other. While Italian artists invented rules of perspective and
proportion to govern their representations of man in his natural
environment, the German and early Netherlandish
painters perfected their observation and depiction of individual
natural phenomena without, however, establishing a correct perspectival
space within which to contain the multiplicity of detail. Albrecht Dürer
was, in effect, the first non-Italian artist to associate the
humanistic disciplines with the esthetic
pursuits of art. Albrecht Dürer was born on May 21, 1471, in
Nuremberg. His father, Albrecht the Elder, was a Hungarian goldsmith who
went to Nuremberg in 1455, where he married Barbara Holper, daughter of
a goldsmith.
The young Dürer received his first training in his father's workshop as
an engraver.
He executed his first self-portrait, a drawing in silverpoint, at the
age of 13. His Apprenticeship From 1486 to 1490
Dürer was apprenticed to the Nuremberg painter and woodcut
illustrator Michael Wolgemut, following which he went on his bachelor's
journey, the route of which is not known but which presumably led him
to the Rhineland
and to the Netherlands, since influences of early Netherlandish art are
traceable in his works. He arrived in Colmar in 1492, soon after the
death of the prominent German graphic artist Martin Schongauer in 1491,
and continued on to Basel, where he stayed until late 1493 working
extensively as a woodcut designer. There is a difference of
scholarly opinion in regard to Dürer's work in Basel, mostly woodcuts in
books illustrated by several artists. The works generally ascribed to
him show he was an extremely lively and many-faceted artist, interested
in the representation of various aspects of daily life. The prints and
drawings he executed at that period were influenced by Schongauer and
the Housebook Master, the two major representatives of Rhenish graphic
art. In 1493 Dürer painted a self-portrait (Paris) in which he
represented himself in a lyrical, romantic vein and inscribed above his
head, "My affairs will go as ordained in Heaven." In May 1494 he
returned to Nuremberg, and 2 months later he married Agnes Frey. First Trip to Italy In the fall Dürer journeyed to
Venice, Padua, and Mantua. He copied works by the leading contemporary
Italian masters, and it is apparent in his drawings that he soon learned
how to impart
to his figures perfection of anatomy, classical pathos,
and harmony. It was at this time that Dürer began to be interested in
the art of the ancients, although he probably had access to the
classical works largely through Italian copies and interpretations. In
the process of assimilating
the spirit of classical art, he became aware of the necessity of art
theory, to which he later devoted much of his time. Dürer's travels not
only opened his eyes to the marvels of ancient art but also to the
variety to be found in nature, which he captured in his excellent
landscape drawings and watercolors of Alpine views. Return
to Nuremberg In 1498 Dürer published a series of 15 woodcuts, the
Apocalypse, which represents the highest achievement of German
graphic art in that medium and which had a dramatic message to impart on
the eve of the Protestant Reformation. The series is a tour de force in
giving shape, in a realistic framework, to the fantastic images
conjured up in the Book of Revelation. Each of the woodcuts represents a
homogeneous
action but at the same time contributes to create a powerful unity of
the whole series. In the Apocalypse series as well as in the
later series of prints representing the Passion of Christ (The Great
Passion, begun before 1500 and published in 1511; the Small
Passion, 1509-1511, repeated in copper engravings in 1507-1513; and
the Life of the Virgin, 1500-1511), Dürer interpreted the Gospel
in a new, human, and understandable language, organically fusing
northern realism with the ideal beauty of Italy. In Dürer's
painting, another self-portrait (1498; Madrid) marked the turning point
of his art. He represented himself as a humanist
scholar and an elegant young man without the attributes of his
profession. In this way he opposed the concept of art as craft current
outside of Italy. "There were many talented youths in our German
countries who were taught the art of painting but without fundamentals
and with daily practice only. They therefore grew up unconscious as a
wild uncut
tree," he wrote. He wanted to be different and to change his followers:
"Since geometry is the right foundation of all painting, I have decided
to teach its rudiments and principles to all youngsters eager for art…" In
his altarpieces Dürer revealed his interest in perspective, as in the Paumgartner
Altarpiece (1502-1504). His portraits, such as Oswolt Krell
(1499), were characterized by sharp psychological insight. Dürer
depicted mythological and allegorical
subjects in engravings on metal, for example, the Dream of the
Doctor (after 1497) and Sea Monster (ca. 1498), and he also
used that technique for one of his most popular prints, the Prodigal
Son (ca. 1496). Dürer represented the hero in a novel way, the scene
chosen being neither the prodigal
son's sinful life nor the happy ending of his return to his father,
but the moment in which the hero becomes cognizant
of his sinful life and begins his repentance.
In the print Nemesis (1501-1502) Dürer's study of human
proportion is manifested, together with his taste for complicated
humanistic allegory,
which appears in several of his prints of that period. Second Trip to Italy In 1505 Dürer went to Venice
again. Records of that stay abound
in his letters to his humanist friend Willibald Pirckheimer. There is
no mention of a visit to Rome. The assumption that Dürer visited Rome
has been a subject much discussed by art historians. It was only quite
recently that the inscription "Romae 1506" was discovered on his
painting Christ among the Doctors (Lugano), which seems to argue
favorably for the assumption that he did go to Rome. Until recently
scholars knew only that he went as far as Balogna, but even if he really
visited Rome his stay there must have been rather short as it left no
visible traces in his drawings. It was the art of Venice that
profoundly influenced Dürer's work. He was on good terms there with
artists, humanists, and noblemen. He wrote Pirckheimer that the painter
Giovanni Bellini was his friend and wanted Dürer to paint a picture for
him. It seems, however, that it was Dürer's prints rather than his
paintings which established his reputation. In 1506 Dürer painted
for the church of the German merchants in Venice, S. Bartolommeo, his
most Italian picture - in composition as in color: the Feast of the
Rose Garlands. Even today, in spite of its damaged condition, "a solemn
splendor of the southern town rests upon the picture," according to M.
J. Friendländer. Dürer's portraits done at this time excel by nature of
their soft subtlety
of chiaroscuro,
compositional simplicity, and lyrical mood, for example, Portrait of
a Young Girl (1505; Vienna). The same freedom of touch, subtle and
flexible, characterizes his drawings of nudes, done during and after the
Italian journey. Nuremberg Altarpieces The
large altarpieces executed when Dürer returned to Nuremberg show a
mixture of colorful Italianisms with the traditional northern style. One
of them is the Heller Altarpiece (1507-1509). The central panel
was destroyed by fire in 1729 and is known only through a copy by Jobst
Harrich. The wings were painted by Dürer's assistants, and four panels
were executed by Mathias Grünewald. The other two important
altarpieces of that period are the Adoration of the Trinity
(1511) and the Martyrdom of the Ten Thousand (1508), in which
Dürer's placement of little figures in vast landscapes was a return to
his early style, based on the traditions of northern painting. Dürer was
also returning to his personal heritage in that he once again took up
the engraver's burin
as his main tool. Melancholy and Humanism Perhaps
Dürer's most important works of the period from 1513 to 1520 were his
engravings. In them his humanistic interests appear, developed through
his friendships with distinguished German scholars, especially
Pirckheimer. Through Pirckheimer, Dürer became acquainted
with contemporary Italian thought as well as with classical philosophy
and its recent revival known as Neoplatonism.
The three so-called Master Engravings Knight, Death, and the Devil
(1513), St. Jerome in His Study (1514), and Melencolia I
(1514) are the climax of Dürer's graphic style and also express his
thoughts on life, man, and art. These engravings are allegories of
the three kinds of virtue associated with the three spheres of human
activity: in Knight the active sphere is depicted; in St.
Jerome, the contemplative
sphere; and in Melencolia I, the intellectual sphere, which
Erwin Panofsky describes as an allegory of "the life of the secular
genius in the rational and imaginative worlds of science and art." The
three prints excel not only in transmitting their complicated
allegorical messages but also in conveying a powerful expression of
mood: heroic in Kinght, intellectually concentrated but serene
in St. Jerome, and dramatic and gloomy
in Melencolia. At the same time they show the greatest
virtuosity in the handling of the medium; their silvery,
vibrant surfaces contain both graphic and pictorial effects. It is
possible that Melencolia was connected with a difficult moment in
the development of Dürer's theoretical concepts, which he formulated at
that time, although it was only later that his theoretical works were
published. Dürer was equally interested in a direct depiction of
observed data. Throughout his life he drew and engraved simple motifs
studied from life, as in the dramatic drawing of his old mother, emaciated
and ill (1514). Until 1519 Dürer worked for Emperor Maximilian I,
taking part in the execution of various artistic projects of
allegorical and decorative character, mostly in graphic media (the Triumphal
Arch and the Triumphal Procession ofMaximilian I) but
also in miniature (drawings in the Maximilian I Prayer Book,
1515). Last Period In July 1520 Dürer left for
the Netherlands in order to receive from Charles V, Maximilian I's
successor, the re-confirmation of his yearly salary of 100 florins that
Maximilian had allotted him. This trip was a triumph for the artist and
proved the esteem
with which he was regarded. In his travel journal Dürer left a moving
day-by-day record of his stay in Antwerp and of his visits to various
Dutch, Belgian, and German towns. He met princes, rich merchants, and
great artists. He drew portraits, landscapes, townscapes, and
curiosities in his sketchbook.
He met Erasmus
of Rotterdam, whom he greatly admired and of whom he made a portrait
drawing, which he later engraved (1526). Dürer's last years were
difficult. The Reformation was creating great religious and social
changes. Dürer supported Martin Luther, whose teachings were heralded by
Dürer's Apocalypse. In his last drawings, such as the Oblong
Passion (10 drawings, 1520-1524), he expressed his powerful religious
feelings, but held in check by a severe composition. Dürer's last
great work was the so-called Four Apostles (1526). The
monumental, sculpturesque figures towering in their shallow space
represent Saints John and Peter (left panel) and Saints Mark and Paul
(right panel). The two paintings were probably intended as the wings of a
triptych,
the central panel of which was not executed. He gave the panels to the
Town Council of Nuremberg. In the panels he included quotations from the
writings of the saints represented, which contained accusations against
"false prophets." Dürer's work proclaimed the unity of the new faith
against the different sects arising at that time. In 1525 Dürer
published his book concerning perspective (Instruction in Measurement),
and in 1527 his treatise on fortifications appeared. He died on April
6, 1528, a few months before his last and most important theoretical
work, The Four Books on Proportions, was published. Excellent
painter, engraver, and draftsman,
Dürer was also a learned theorist. Active in art and science, he was
the first true Renaissance artist outside of Italy and in his diversity a
typical Renaissance man. Dürer's Influence Dürer's
influence was greater than that of any artist of northern Europe of his
time and was most widely felt through his woodcuts and engravings. He
created a language of visual forms that furnished his contemporaries and
followers with modern tools adapted to their needs: his art was a
translation of the Italian Renaissance vocabulary into a dialect
understandable north of the Alps. Dürer was beloved by the German
romantic artists and writers of the 19th century, for whom he
represented the quintessential German artist. Further
Reading An English edition of Dürer's writings is William Martin
Conway, Literary Remains of Albrecht Dürer (1889; rev. ed. 1958).
A selection of his writings is included in Wolfgang Stechow, ed., Northern
Renaissance Art, 1400-1600: Sources and Documents (1966). There are
several works on Dürer in English, all overshadowed by the magisterial
monograph of the foremost Dürer scholar, Erwin Panofsky, The Life
and Art of Albrecht Dürer (2 vols., 1943; paperback ed., 1 vol.,
1971). Old but good is William Martin Conway, The Art of Albrecht
Dürer (1910). Wilhelm Waetzoldt, Dürer and His Times (1935;
trans. 1950), written for a general audience, stresses the cultural
background. For a study of Dürer's drawings see Dürer: Drawings and
Water Colours, selected and with an introduction by Edmund Schilling
(trans. 1949); and for the prints see Arthur M. Hind, Albrecht
Dürer: His Engravings and Woodcuts (1911). The humanistic background
and the symbolism of the Melencolia I print are discussed in
Raymond Klibansky, Erwin Panofsky, and Fritz Saxl, Saturn and
Melancholy (1964).
Britannica
Concise
Encyclopedia:Albrecht
Dürer
(born , May 21, 1471, Imperial Free City of
Nürnberg — died April 6, 1528, Nürnberg) German painter and printmaker.
He worked as a draftsman in his father's goldsmith workshop before being
apprenticed at 15 to a painter and illustrator in his native Nürnberg.
He opened his own workshop c. 1494 and began producing woodcuts
and copper engravings. His extensive travel took him twice to Italy;
Italian influence can be seen in such engravings as The Four
Witches (c. 1497) and Adam and Eve (1504). He
became known for his penetrating half-length portraits and
self-portraits. In 1506, in Venice, he completed his great altarpiece The Feast of the Rose Garlands for the German chapel in the
church of San Bartolommeo. Later important graphic works include his
famous Passion series of copperplate engravings (1507 –
13) as well as his greatest engravings: St. Jerome in His
Study, Melencolia I and The Knight, Death, and the Devil
(1513 – 14). Back in Nürnberg he worked for Emperor Maximilian
I (1512 – 19). By 1515 he had achieved international fame. In 1518
he became a devoted follower of Martin
Luther. His finest painting is the Four Apostles of
1526. He was the greatest Renaissance
artist in northern Europe and had many pupils and imitators.
For more information on Albrecht Dürer, visit Britannica.com.
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