Albrecht Dürer (1471–1528)

GENERAL DESCRIPTION
A key figure of the Renaissance, German artist Albrecht Dürer (1471–1528) achieved success as a painter, printmaker, and theorist.Dürer left a profound mark on the course of art history through his contributions to the field of printmaking.In the fifteenth century, reproducible woodcuts and engravings were made possible by new technologies and became accessible to a fairly wide audience. Dürer established innovative technical standards and formulated original iconographic models that would be repeated by many generations of artists. 

Dürer was also working within the changing religious and cultural world of the early 16th century. Growing discontent with the unfettered power of the Catholic Church gave way to the Protestant Reformation, which flourished in Northern Europe. The Reformation challenged the traditional relationship between religion and art and introduced more secular subject matter and patronage. Dürer, who was deeply religious, converted to Protestantism late in life, and his strong religious sentiments would underlie much of his oeuvre. Many of his prints featured portraits of saints or scenes from the life of Jesus, which were meant to inspire his religious audience to devotion, while other prints featured terrorizing monsters, and served as warnings for those who did not follow Christian teachings. 

Artistically, Dürer was a bridge between the Italian Renaissance and Northern Renaissance. While working within the technological and religious spheres of northern Europe (countries north of Italy), he was also intrigued by the artistic advances of the south. Dürer was deeply fascinated with the nude and human anatomy, an interest in part derived from his knowledge of Italian humanist scholars who had extolled man as God's most perfect creation. Dürer absorbed these ideas during visits in 1494 and 1505 to Italy, where he copied the precise, geometrically conceived paintings of Andrea Mantegna (c. 1431--1506). Following his trips to Italy, Dürer began to experiment with the depiction of classical subjects and the beasts of ancient mythology, the nude human body, and mathematically derived architectural perspective. This hybridization of visual culture would win Dürer the patronage of kings and emperors, as well as great popularity and fame during his time and beyond. 

Adapted from
  • Shirley Reece-Hughes, "Albrecht Dürer, The Sea Monster," in Dallas Museum of Art: A Guide to the Collection, ed. Charles Venable (New Haven, NJ: Yale University Press, 1997), 77.
  • Laura Sevelis, DMA gallery text for Saints and Monsters: Prints by Albrecht Dürer, March 2015

NOTES
Work- Nuremberg (1486-1489, 1494-1505, 1507-1520 and 1521-1528) Apprenticed to Michael Wolgemut, opens his own workshop in 1495; member of the Great Council of Nuremberg in 1509; bought house in the Zisselgasse (today Durer-Haus Museum) in 1509.
Trained- Basel (1492)
Trained- Colmar (1492) Visits the workshop of Martin Schongauer, befriends Caspar and Paul Schongaur- the artist's brothers.
Trained- Strasbourg (1493) Studies the sculpture of Nikolaus Gerhaert
Trained- Venice (1494-1495 and 1505-1507) Sees work by Andrea Mantegna and Giovanni Bellini, returns to Venice and Northern Italy in 1505.
Worked- Netherlands (1520-1521)

Removed the tags %PictionMW and %UMO pending because I finished cataloging the Durer self-portrait and moved it to the Online Collections folder in Piction.

ASSOCIATED CONTENT CHUNKS 
Martin Luther
Reformation
Catholicism
Protestantism

AUDIO ASSETS 
Josh Rose, Saints and Monsters: Prints by Albrecht Durer, gallery talk, June 17, 2015. UMO: 248141244

VIDEO ASSETS  

IMAGE ASSETS 
265929091: UMO. [Caption] Self-Portrait in a Fur-Collared Robe, Albrecht Durer, 1500. Source: Alte Pinakothek, Wikimedia Commons, accessed July 15, 2016.
Revised and completed cataloguing in Piction- March 14, 2017- EAS. Moved Piction asset to the Online Collections folder.

WEB RESOURCES 

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES 

FUN FACTS 
  • Assigning dates to Dürer's prints is less difficult for works produced at the height of his career. Starting in 1503, he began inscribing all of his engravings with a year.
  • In addition to the nearly five hundred prints and one thousand drawings he produced, Dürer also published several books of his prints including the first book to be entirely produced by an artist, The Apocolypse (1498). He also wrote multi-volume analyses on geometry (Four Books on Measurement, 1525) and anatomy (Four Books on Human Proportion, started in 1512, plublished in 1528). 

TEACHING IDEAS 

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General Description
A key figure of the Renaissance, German artist Albrecht Dürer (1471–1528) achieved success as a painter, printmaker, and theorist.Dürer left a profound mark on the course of art history through his contributions to the field of printmaking.In the fifteenth century, reproducible woodcuts and engravings were made possible by new technologies and became accessible to a fairly wide audience. Dürer established innovative technical standards and formulated original iconographic models that would be repeated by many generations of artists. 

Dürer was also working within the changing religious and cultural world of the early 16th century. Growing discontent with the unfettered power of the Catholic Church gave way to the Protestant Reformation, which flourished in Northern Europe. The Reformation challenged the traditional relationship between religion and art and introduced more secular subject matter and patronage. Dürer, who was deeply religious, converted to Protestantism late in life, and his strong religious sentiments would underlie much of his oeuvre. Many of his prints featured portraits of saints or scenes from the life of Jesus, which were meant to inspire his religious audience to devotion, while other prints featured terrorizing monsters, and served as warnings for those who did not follow Christian teachings. 

Artistically, Dürer was a bridge between the Italian Renaissance and Northern Renaissance. While working within the technological and religious spheres of northern Europe (countries north of Italy), he was also intrigued by the artistic advances of the south. Dürer was deeply fascinated with the nude and human anatomy, an interest in part derived from his knowledge of Italian humanist scholars who had extolled man as God's most perfect creation. Dürer absorbed these ideas during visits in 1494 and 1505 to Italy, where he copied the precise, geometrically conceived paintings of Andrea Mantegna (c. 1431--1506). Following his trips to Italy, Dürer began to experiment with the depiction of classical subjects and the beasts of ancient mythology, the nude human body, and mathematically derived architectural perspective. This hybridization of visual culture would win Dürer the patronage of kings and emperors, as well as great popularity and fame during his time and beyond. 

Adapted from
  • Shirley Reece-Hughes, "Albrecht Dürer, The Sea Monster," in Dallas Museum of Art: A Guide to the Collection, ed. Charles Venable (New Haven, NJ: Yale University Press, 1997), 77.
  • Laura Sevelis, DMA gallery text for Saints and Monsters: Prints by Albrecht Dürer, March 2015

Fun Facts
 
  • Assigning dates to Dürer's prints is less difficult for works produced at the height of his career. Starting in 1503, he began inscribing all of his engravings with a year.
  • In addition to the nearly five hundred prints and one thousand drawings he produced, Dürer also published several books of his prints including the first book to be entirely produced by an artist, The Apocolypse (1498). He also wrote multi-volume analyses on geometry (Four Books on Measurement, 1525) and anatomy (Four Books on Human Proportion, started in 1512, plublished in 1528). 

Archival Resources
 
Web Resources
 
Notes
Work- Nuremberg (1486-1489, 1494-1505, 1507-1520 and 1521-1528) Apprenticed to Michael Wolgemut, opens his own workshop in 1495; member of the Great Council of Nuremberg in 1509; bought house in the Zisselgasse (today Durer-Haus Museum) in 1509.
Trained- Basel (1492)
Trained- Colmar (1492) Visits the workshop of Martin Schongauer, befriends Caspar and Paul Schongaur- the artist's brothers.
Trained- Strasbourg (1493) Studies the sculpture of Nikolaus Gerhaert
Trained- Venice (1494-1495 and 1505-1507) Sees work by Andrea Mantegna and Giovanni Bellini, returns to Venice and Northern Italy in 1505.
Worked- Netherlands (1520-1521)

Removed the tags %PictionMW and %UMO pending because I finished cataloging the Durer self-portrait and moved it to the Online Collections folder in Piction.

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*European Art
Christianity: AAT: 300073711
Italy (nation): TGN: 1000080
anatomy (biological science): AAT: 300054465
mythology (literary genre): AAT: 300055985
humanism: AAT: 300055791
patrons (philanthropists): AAT: 300115251
printmaking: AAT: 300131119
iconography: AAT: 300055859
books: AAT: 300028051
Nuremberg (Germany): TGN: 7004334
Roman Catholicism (Christianity): AAT: 300073730
Durer_Albrecht: ULAN: 500115493
mathematics: AAT: 300054522
248141244: UMO
Reformation: AAT: 300022041
Protestantism: AAT: 300073735
Northern Renaissance: AAT: 300252246
Mantegna_Andrea: ULAN: 500004218
265929091: UMO
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