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Albrecht Dürer
Celebrated painter and engraver, born at Nuremberg, Germany, 21 May, 1471; died there, 6 April, 1528. Dürer left his native city, then famous for its commerce, learning, and art, but three times in his life. His first journey was undertaken after he had completed his apprenticeships both to his father, a goldsmith, and to the painter and engraver Wohlgemut; on this occasion, he traveled through Germany and visited at Colmar and Basle the family of the recently deceased Schongaur; in 1505-07 he spent some time in Venice; in 1520-21 he went to the Netherlands, visiting especially Antwerp.
FIRST PERIOD (BEFORE 1505)
After the earliest works of his youth (portraits, Madonnas, coats-of-arms,
landscape-sketches) he set up in 1494 a studio of his own. In the same year he
married Agnes Frey but they had no children. Among his Nuremberg friends the
learned humanist Willibald Pirkheimer held the first place. Besides great
advancement in learning, Dürer owed to Pirkheimer the happiness of a lifelong
friendship and the acquaintance with classical antiquity which he occasionally
drew upon in his work. Dürer's art, however, with its sources in the German
Middle Ages, remained essentially German; the influence of the art of Italy and
the Netherlands was merely supplementary. In his own century there were few
chances for mural paintings; but the demand for altar-pieces and portraits was
all the greater. His woodcuts were eagerly sought after by the general public,
his engravings on copper by connoisseurs. Among his fine compositions are: the
Baumgartner altar-painting, the central panel of which represents the Adoration
of the Christ Child, the wings the donors as Sts. George and Eustacious; the
Lamentation of Christ
in which the pathos is noteworthy; and the remarkable
picture of himself (1500). These are preserved in the Alte Pinakothek in Munich.
The portrait of himself just mentioned is greatly idealized as is also that of a
lady of the Furleger family. On the other hand in the portraits of his father
and mother realism predominates. But here, as in the Prodigal Son.
and in his
drawings, Dürer seeks to elevate his naturalism by sweet simplicity, depth of
feeling, and grandeur of conception. The Adoration of the Magi
in the Uffizi
at Florence will bear comparison, at least for German taste, with the
masterpieces of Italy and the Netherlands. Dürer's own woodcuts have a quality
entirely their own; though without colouring, they yet produced the effect of
colour. The Apocalypse
(15 cuts) is distinguished by its daring fancy and
grandeur of composition . The most striking of the series are: the Four Riders
,
the Angels of the Euphrates
, and the Battle of the Angels with the Dragon
.
To the same period belong, for the most part, the powerful Larger Passion
(7,
later 20, cuts) as well as the beautiful Life of the Virgin
(16, later 20,
cuts), in which the scenes from the life of the Holy Family in Egypt have all
the sweetness of a charming idyll. Mention should be made of the so-called
Green Passion
in the Albertina Museum at Vienna, a series of twelve drawings
with pen on green paper, also of the Smaller Passion
of a later date in 37
woodcuts, and of the 17 copperplate engravings on the same subject. For the
fifth time the artist came back to the Passion of Christ eight years before his
death; a few sketches are to be found in the Uffizi at Florence and in the
Albertina at Vienna. Wood and copperplate engraving were brought to great
perfection by Dürer; the latter, and etchings as well, by his own work; the
former by his directions to the wood-engravers who carried out his designs.
SECOND PERIOD (1505-1520)
In The Festival of the Rosary
, painted in Venice for German merchants
residing there, he competes, not unsuccessfully, with the Italian colourists,
though it may be said that colour was not his strong point. The painting (Abbey
of Strahow, Prague) is damaged, but a good copy is preserved in the Imperial
Museum at Vienna. An oil painting of the same period, Christ on the Cross
, and
other works that followed, e.g. Adam and Eve
(Madrid and Florence), show that
Dürer's trip to Italy and the acquaintance made there with Giovanni Bellini were
not without profit to his art; but Dürer's nationality and the independence of
his genius are always evident. Another work much admired was the so-called
Heller altar-piece, destroyed in Munich in 1674 by fire. Valuable studies for
this picture and an indistinct copy are still extant. One of the finest examples
of German art is the Adoration of the Trinity
or All Saints
(1511). Placed
beside the Disputa
of Raphael or the Sistine paintings of Michaelangelo,
produced in the same year, it would not suffer from the comparison. God the
Father sits upon a throne and holds forth the Cross with the Crucified; above
both of them, in the form of a dove, the Holy Ghost hovers. About them the
saints of heaven in two companies with the Mother of God and John the Baptist at
their head kneel in adoration. In the upper part of the picture, above the
blessed hosts, choirs of angels surround the Holy Trinity; in the lower part,
the Church Militant, led by the powerful figure of a pope and an emperor, takes
part in the adoration. As an idealization of the world this multitude stands
above the clouds. At the very bottom and to one side, as though left behind, is
seen the humble figure of the painter. This work deserves no less praise for its
perfection of finish than for its sublimity of conception. The frame, carved in
Renaissance style from drawings by Dürer, is still preserved at Nuremberg. In
the same year, 1511, Dürer produced the Virgin with the Pear
, one of the
finest of his Madonnas. In the years 1513-14 he executed three great copperplate
engravings: these may, perhaps, be looked upon as ideal representations of a
fearless knight, an unsatisfied searcher for knowledge, and a saint happy in God
and are called: The Knight with Death and the Devil
; Melancholia
; Saint
Jerome in His Study
. To these must be added various paintings, e.g. of
Charlemagne, Sigmund, and Albrecht of Brandenburg; further, the marginal
drawings, displaying much fancy and humour, made for Maximillian's Prayer Book
,
and the Triumphal Arch of Maximillian
belong to the same time. Later, Dürer
worked also on the Triumph of Maximillian
, and produced the large Triumphal
Car
, for the emperor.
THIRD PERIOD (1520-1528)
Admirable sketches for St. Jerome with the Skull
, lately discovered by
Anton Weber in Lisbon, give ample proof of the artist's diligence during his
stay in the Netherlands. The striking head of the saint is very like the Head
of an Old Man
in the Albertina. After his return to Nuremberg, Dürer painted a
noteworthy Head of Christ
, and portraits of Pinkheimer, Erasmus, and
Holzschuher. His last work of importance (1526) was the Four Apostles
, Peter
with John and Paul with Mark; these paintings which are now in Munich, are much
admired for the individuality of character expressed by the figures and the fine
treatment of the drapery. From the inscription under these pictures, despite the
fact that Peter is represented as holding the keys of heaven, and from other
circumstances that prove little, some have wished to infer that towards the end
of his life became attached to the doctrines of Luther. But even the Protestants
van Eye, A. W. Becker, C, Kinkle, and others, do not share in this opinion, and
M. Thausing, the great Dürer scholar, has now rejected it. No doubt many
well-disposed persons of the time saw the necessity of ecclesiastical reform and
hoped it would be hastened by Luther's stand. But they were deceived and
acknowledged it, as Pirkheimer did for himself and his friend: I confess that
in the beginning I believed in Luther, like our Albert of blessed memory … but
as anyone can see, the situation has become worse.
In the years 1525-27, Dürer
wrote three books: on geometry, the proportions of the human figure, and the art
of fortification.
SINGER, Versuch einer Dürer Bibliographie in Studien zur deutschen Kunstgeschichte (1905); CONWAY, Literary Remains of Albrecht Dürer (Cambridge 1889); CUST, Albrecht Dürer, A Study of His Life and Works (London 1897); KNACKFUSS, A. Dürer (6th ed., 1899), tr. DODGESON (LONDON, 1900); WEBER, A. Dürer (3rd ed. Ratisbon, 1903); Collection of drawings by LIPPMANN (4 vols.); of woodcuts LUTZOW; of copperplates and etchings LUTZOW and SOLDAU; of letters and diaries, THAUSUNG.
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