Meder albrecht durer biography
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10 things to know about Albrecht Dürer
Alastair Smart traces the life and work of perhaps the finest printmaker in the history of art, bringer of the Renaissance to Northern Europe and creator of the Rhinoceros, Melencolia I and Knight, Death and the Devil. Illustrated with prints offered at Christie’s
Even as a 13-year-old, he was breaking new ground
Albrecht Dürer was born in the German city of Nuremberg in May 1471, one of 18 children born to Albrecht and Barbara Dürer (only three of whom survived to adulthood). His father — after whom he was named — was a successful goldsmith of Hungarian heritage, and young Albrecht apprenticed with him before deciding on an artistic career instead.
He showed talent at an early age. The silverpoint Self-portrait as a thirteen-year-old of 1484 — in which he depicted himself wide-eyed and chubby-cheeked — is the earliest, securely attributed self-portrait by a European Master that survives, and was created when he had barely become a teenager.
Dürer’s home city was one of the most important in Europe
Lying at the heart of the Holy Roman Empire — and, indeed, Europe — Nuremberg was an economic and manufacturing hub. Silver and copper mined in nearby
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Title:Willibald Pirckheimer
Artist:Albrecht Dürer (German, Nuremberg 1471–1528 Nuremberg)
Sitter:Portrait of Willibald Pirckheimer (German, Eichstätt 1470–1530 Nuremberg)
Date:1524
Medium:Engraving
Dimensions:Sheet: 7 5/16 × 4 11/16 in. (18.6 × 11.9 cm)
Classification:Prints
Credit Line:George Khuner Collection, Bequest of Marianne Khuner, 1984
Object Number:1984.1201.23
Marking: Hermann Weber (Lugt 1383); Ludwig Yorck von Wartenburg (Lugt 2669)
Hermann Weber (German); Graf Ludwig Yorck von Wartenburg
Koehler 100; Meder 112.103a; Hollstein VII.94.103; Schoch, Mende, and Scherbaum 99i
How Engravings are Made
An illustrated explainer.
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