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May 21, 1471 - April 6, 1528
Albrecht Dürer was a German painter, wood carver and engraver.
He is best known for his woodcuts in series,
including the Apocalypse (1498), two series on the crucifixion of Christ,
the Great Passion (1498-1510) and the Little Passion (1510-11) as well
as many of his individual prints, such as Knight, Death, and the Devil
(1513) and Melancholia I (1514).
He was born in Nuremberg. His family came from Hungary, germanicising
the family name of Thürer when they settled in Nuremberg soon after
the middle of the 15th century. His father, also called Albrecht, was
a goldsmith and served as assistant to Hieronymus Helfer, and in 1468
married his daughter Barbara. They had eighteen children, of whom Albrecht
was the second. Albrecht's brother, Hans Dürer, became a famous artist
as well.
At the age of fifteen Dürer was apprenticed
to the principal painter of the town, Michael Wolgemut, a prolific if
undistinguished producer of small works in the late Gothic style. Dürer
learned not only painting but also wood carving and elementary copper
engraving under Wolgemut. At the end of his apprenticeship in 1490 he
travelled (Wanderjahre). In 1492 he arrived in Colmar, intending to study
under Martin Schöngauer, a well regarded painter-engraver of his
time. He found that Schongauer had died the previous year, but he was
received kindly by the family of the deceased master there and in Basel.
Under them he evidently had some practice both in metal-engraving and
in furnishing designs for the woodcutter. He left Basel some time in 1494
and travelled briefly in the Low Countries before he returned to Nuremberg.
From this period, little of the work that can be attributed to him with
certainty survives.
On July 9, 1494 Dürer was married, according
to an arrangement made during his absence, to Agnes Frey, the daughter
of a local merchant. His relationship with his wife is unclear and her
reputation has suffered from a posthumous assault by Dürer's friends.
He did not remain in Nuremberg long; in the autumn of 1494 he travelled
to Italy, leaving his wife at Nuremberg. He went to Venice, evidence of
his travels being derived from drawings and engravings that are closely
linked to existing northern Italian works by Mantegna, Antonio Pollaiuolo,
Lorenzo di Credi and others. Some time in 1495 Dürer must have returned
to Nuremberg, where he seems to have lived and worked for possibly the
next ten years, producing most of his notable prints.
During the first few years from 1495 he worked
in the established Germanic and northern forms but was open to the influences
of the Renaissance. His best works in this period were for wood-block
printing, typical scenes of popular devotion developed into his famous
series of sixteen great designs for the Apocalypse, first carved in 1498.
Counterpointed with the first seven of scenes of the Great Passion in
the same year, and a little later a series of eleven on the Holy Family
and of saints. Around 1504-1505 he carved the first seventeen of a set
illustrating the life of the Virgin. Neither these nor the Great Passion
were published till several years later.
In the more finely detailed and expensive
copper-engraving Dürer was training himself. He attempted no subjects
of the scale of his woodcuts, but produced a number of Madonnas, single
figures from scripture or of the saints, some nude mythologies, and groups,
sometimes satirical, of ordinary people. The Venetian artist Jacopo de
Barbari, whom Dürer had met in Venice, came to Nuremberg for a while
in 1500. He influenced Dürer with the new developments in perspective,
anatomy and proportion, from which Dürer began his own studies. A
series of extant drawings show Dürer's experiments in human proportion,
up to the famous engraving of Adam and Eve (1504) which showed his firm
and detailed grasp of landscape had extended into the quality of flesh
surfaces by the subtlest use of the graving-tool known to him. Two or
three other technical masterpieces were produced up to 1505, when he made
a second visit to Italy.
Melancholia, 1514, EngravingIn Italy he turned his hand to painting, at
first producing a series of works by tempera-painting on linen, including
portraits and altarpieces, notably the Paumgartner altarpiece and the
Adoration of the Magi. In early 1506 he returned to Venice, and stayed
there until the spring of 1507. The occasion of this journey has been
erroneously stated by Vasari. Dürer's engravings had by this time
attained great popularity and had begun to be copied. In Venice he was
given a valuable commission from the emigrant German community for the
church of St. Bartholomew. The picture painted by Dürer was closer
to the Italian style - the Adoration of the Virgin, also known as the
Feast of Rose Garlands; it was subsequently acquired by the Emperor Rudolf
II and taken to Vienna. Other paintings Dürer produced in Venice
include The Virgin and Child with the Goldfinch, a Christ disputing with
the Doctors (apparently produced in a mere five days) and a number of
smaller works.
Despite the regard in which he was held by
the Venetians, Dürer was back in Nuremberg by mid-1507. He remained
in Germany until 1520. His reputation spread all over Europe. He was on
terms of friendship or friendly communication with all the masters of
the age, and Raphael held himself honoured in exchanging drawings with
Dürer.
The years between his return from Venice
and his journey to the Netherlands are commonly divided according to the
type of work with which he was principally occupied. The first five years,
1507-1511, are pre-eminently the painting years of his life. In them,
working with a vast number of preliminary drawings and studies, he produced
what have been accounted his four best works in painting - Adam and Eve
(1507), Virgin with the Iris (1508), the altarpiece the Assumption of
the Virgin (1509), and the Adoration of the Trinity by all the Saints
(1511). During this period he also completed the two woodcut series of
the Great Passion and the Life of the Virgin, both published in 1511 together
with a second edition of the Apocalypse series.
From 1511 to 1514, Dürer concentrated
on engraving, both on wood and copper, but especially the latter. The
major work he produced in this period was the thirty-seven subjects of
the Little Passion on wood, published first in 1511, and a set of fifteen
small copper-engravings on the same theme in 1512. In 1513 and 1514 appeared
the three most famous of Dürer's works in copper-engraving, The Knight
and Death (or simply The Knight, as he called it, 1513), Melancolia and
St Jerome in his Study (both 1514).
In the remaining years to 1520 he produced
a wide range of works. Tempera on linen portraits in 1516. Engravings
on many subjects, experiments in etching on plates of iron and zinc. A
part of the Triumphal Gate and the Triumphal March for the Emperor Maximilian.
He also did the marginal decorations for the Emperor's prayer-book and
a portrait-drawing of the Emperor shortly before his death in 1519.
A Young Hare, 1502, WatercolourIn the summer of 1520 the desire of Dürer
to secure new patronage following the death of Maximilian and an outbreak
of sickness in Nuremberg, gave occasion to his fourth and last journey.
Together with his wife and her maid he set out in July for the Netherlands
in order to be present at the coronation of the new Emperor Charles V.
He journeyed by the Rhine, Cologne, and then to Antwerp, where he was
well received and produced numerous drawings in silver-point, chalk or
charcoal. Besides going to Aachen for the coronation, he made excursions
to Cologne, Nijmwegen, 's-Hertogenbosch, Brussels, Bruges, Ghent and to
Zealand. He finally returned home in July 1521, having caught an undetermined
illness which afflicted him for the rest of his life.
Back in Nuremberg he began work on a series
of religious pictures. Many preliminary sketches and studies survive,
but no paintings on the grand scale were ever carried out. This was due
in part to his declining health, but more because of the time he gave
to the preparation of his theoretical works on geometry and perspective,
proportion and fortification. Though having little natural gift for writing,
he worked hard to produce his works. The consequence was that in the last
years of his life he produced, as an artist, comparatively little. In
painting there was a portrait of Hieronymus Holtzschuher, a Madonna and
Child (1526) and two panels showing St. John with St. Peter in front and
St. Paul with St. Mark in the background. In copper-engraving Dürer's
produced only a number of portraits, those of the cardinal-elector of
Mainz (The Great Cardinal), Frederick the Wise, elector of Saxony, and
his friends the humanist scholar Willibald Pirckheimer, Melanchthon and
Erasmus.
Of his books, he succeeded in getting two
finished and produced during his lifetime. One on geometry and perspective,
which was published at Nuremberg in 1525, and one on fortification, published
in 1527. His work on human proportions was brought out shortly after his
death in 1528.
This article is licensed under the GNU
Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia
article "durer".
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