Albrecht Durer Leonardo of the North 1410: Northern Renaissance

Essay one: Albrecht Durer Leonardo of the North 1410

Impressive though others may be, the great German artist of the Northern



Renaissance is Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528). We know his life better than the lives of other artists of his time. Dürer traveled, and found, he says, more appreciation abroad than at home. The Italian influence on his art was of a particularly Venetian strain, through the great Bellini, who, by the time Dürer met him, was an old man. Dürer was an extraordinarily learned person, and the only Northern artist who fully infused the sophisticated Italian dialogue between scientific theory and art, creating his exposition on proportion in 1528.  Even though we know so much about his doings, it is not easy to fathom his thinking.



Albrecht Dürer was born in the imperial free city of Nuremberg on May 27,1471, at a time when the city was shifting from its Gothic past to a more progressive form of Renaissance Humanism.  Dürer's father, a goldsmith, departed Hungary to come to Nuremberg, where he met and married Albrecht's mother -- Barbara Hopkins.  At age 13, Dürer accomplished an artistically precise and meticulous silverpoint, entitled "Self Portrait at age 13."  This work of art not only reveals his premature aptitude as a youth, but the unique details of northern art.  Albrecht Dürer was first apprenticed to his father at age 14, during which time he learned techniques in metal working.  It would be these techniques and his own intrinsic talents that provide a stable base for his future engraving masterpieces.



 Dürer, who did not care for goldsmithing, was apprenticed to one of his fathers' close friends, painter and book illustrator Michael Wohlgmuth, in 1486. While an apprentice under Wohlgemuth, Albrecht acquired the essential skills needed in painting, drawing, and the craft of woodcut.  Michael Wohlgemuth's workshop was extremely busy and was aggressively designing and fabricating woodcuts used in the making of books with detailed illustrations.  It is believed that Albrecht may have assisted in the preparation of illustrations in the Nuremberg Chronicles (1493, Hartmann Schedel).  This project would have allowed Dürer to view works by the leading printmasters of the period, including Martin Schogauer, the Housebook Master, and other Italian artists.



Albecht Dürer left Michael Wohlgemuth's studio in 1490 after finishing his apprenticeship to go on Wanderjahre (wandering journey).  The main purpose of Dürer's journey was to visit Martin Schongauer in Colmar.  It is believed, however, that he first went to visit the Housebook Master working in the middle Rhine area, after which he continued on to the Netherlands.  In 1492 Albrecht sadly discovered that Schongauer had recently died; nonetheless, the master's brothers welcomed Dürer.



Shortly after, Albrecht went onto Basel to work with another of the Schongauer brothers. During this time he also made many contacts. In Basel and later in Strasbourg, Dürer created illustrations for various publications, in addition to Sebastian Brant's Das Narrenschiff (Ship of Fools, translated 1507) in 1494. At the this early period of his life, amid his apprenticeship and his return to Nuremberg in 1494, Dürer's art exhibits his extravagant expertise with line and his astute attention to detail.



Due to a prearranged marriage, Dürer had to return to Nuremberg.  On July 7, 1494, he married Agnes Frey, the daughter of a wealthy local burgher.  Agnes and Albrecht appeared completely unsuited for each other; consequently, only months after their wedding, Dürer left for his first trip to Italy, accompanied by friends.  While in Italy, he visited his good friend Willibald Pirckheimer; in fact, it was Willibald who introduced Albrecht to classical writings and humanist beliefs.  It is believed, perhaps, that Dürer met Jacopo dé Barbari, whose geometrically constructed figures motivated Dürer to contemplate the dimensions of the human body.  Also, during his year long stay in Venice he completed illustrations of mysterious animals and figures, as well as contemplating nature.  During his stay in Italy Albrecht produced some magnificently detailed watercolor landscape studies, presumably during his return journey -- for example, a view of the Castle at Trent (1495, National Gallery, London).



During the ensuing ten years in Nuremberg, from the summer 1495 to fall of 1505, Dürer generated a great abundance of works that strongly secured his notoriety. (The Apocalypse (1498), a series 15 large, full-page woodcut drawings and the engravings Fall of Man (1504)and Large Fortune (1501-1502)). On the whole, these works and others of the period demonstrate his advancing technical expertise of the woodcut and engraving media. They also demonstrate his awareness of human proportions based on passages by the ancient Roman writer Vitruvius, and reflect his dazzling ingenuity to combine the details of nature into believable illustrations of reality. His Self-Portrait of 1500 (Alte Pinakothek, Munich), in which he illustrated himself as a Christ-like figure, reiterates in visual form his lifelong preoccupation with the elevation of the artist's status surpassing that of a mere artisan.



Albrecht left for Italy in fall 1505 after completing Crowned Death on a Thin Horse (British Museum, London). The plague epidemic in Nuremberg is quite possibly the reason Dürer left for Venice. From 1505 to 1507 he remained in Venice where he met the great master Giovanni Bellini and other artists. During his stay he secured a significant commission for a painting, the Feast of the Rose Garlands (1506, National Museum, Prague), for the German Merchants' Foundation.  Albrecht Dürer also composed the following three paintings in which there is a new gentleness of color and tonal harmony:  Christ Among the Doctors (1506, Thyssen Collection, Lugano), Portrait of a Young Woman (1506-1507, Deutsches Museum, Berlin), and lastly Virgin with the Siskin (1506, Deutsches Museum, Berlin).



Upon returning to Nuremberg in February 1507, Dürer began a second period of great productivity. During this time he completed such works as: an Adoration of the Trinity panel, an altarpiece for the Dominican church in Frankfurt (1508-1509, destroyed by fire in 1729), portraits; many prints, two editions of the Passion, woodcuts for the Triumphal Arch for Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I, and a series of engravings that included The Knight, Death, and the Devil (1513), Saint Jerome in His Study (1514), and Melancholia I (1514). Through the linear process of engraving, Dürer was able to produce tones of varying darkness and he used them to illustrate a three-dimensional appearance.



In 1520 Dürer learned that Charles V, Maximilian's successor, was scheduled to be making a voyage to Aachen from Spain.  Upon arrival in Aachen, Charles V was crowned Holy Roman emperor of the Habsburg dynasty. Albrecht Dürer had received a yearly stipend from Maximilian for such works as Triumphal Arch (1515-1517), an enormous woodcut measuring 11½ feet by 9¾ feet and other works of art.  Albrecht was eager to meet with Charles to have his salary continued. Armed with prints and other artworks, which he sold along the way to finance his trip, Dürer journeyed to Aachen and on to the Lowlands between 1520 and 1521. His audience with Charles proved successful.  Albrecht kept a silverpoint diary that consisted of sketches of the many people and places he visited on his pilgrimage to the Netherlands, the first of its kind in the history of art.



 He returned to Nuremberg in July 1521, at which time he started to compose portrait engravings.  The first, Cardinal Albrecht of  Brandenbergwhich, was completed in 1523. The second, was a portrait engraving of an old friend, Willibald Pirckheimer (1524), and the last of his portrait engravings' was Erasmus of Rotterdam (1526) are all remindful of the Flemish portrayals of St. Jerome. His last monumental works are two large panels depicting the Four Apostles (1526?, Alte Pinakothek), were presented originally as his gift to the city of Nuremberg.  Albrecht Dürer also wrote disquisition's on perspective (1525, Underweysung der Messung...), on fortification of towns (1527, Etliche Underricht zu Befestigung der Stett...) and lastly on human proportion (1528, incomplete, Vier Bücher von menschlicher Proprtion).   On April 6, 1528 Albrecht Dürer died, but shall never be forgotten.



The quality of Dürer's work, his astonishing output, and his influence on his contemporaries all underscore the significance of his place in the history of art. In a broader context, his curiosity in geometry and mathematical proportions, his keen sense of history, his observances of nature, and his awareness of his own individual potential demonstrate the intellectually inquiring spirit of the Renaissance.


Essay two: Albrecht Durer vs Brett Whiteley 1238


In this paper I will compare and contrast the work of two well-known and quite contrasting artists that stand out in their approach towards the handling of the figure in their art.  While searching for two artists that would be not only interesting to compare and contrast, but in doing so, further my understanding of the relationship between the artist and their attitude towards their artwork, I came across Brett Whiteley and Albrecht Dürer. I was drawn to these artists because of their capacity to capture so clearly what they saw. Their talents in approach and craftsmanship while so vastly different in some areas were closely related in others.

Both of these artists were exceptionally talented draftsmen and shared a keen sense of observation for realistic detail.  Dürer believed that, by using geometry and measurement, he could create a rational system of perspective and bodily proportions, whereas, Whiteley, although having the ability to draw realistically, was more concerned with abstraction, distortion and exaggeration to create emotion, especially when portraying the human figure.  Both Dürer and Whiteley's art demonstrates their extreme proficiency with line and their ability to depict the human form in ways that many artists could only dream of.

Whiteley's use of line was equal to none, in that with just a few lines he could encapsulate the sensual, feminine curves of a voluptuous female nude.  He had a highly evolved instinct for making marks on surfaces, he had the ability to change a dull, blank sheet of paper into an emotionally charged artwork with a fluid like swipe of a paintbrush.  Dürer's use of line on the other hand was quite different.  The use of millions of fine lines to render an image is typical of German renaissance engravers but Durers astonishing and unequalled achievements in woodcut and engraving permanently changed the graphic arts and heightened its possibilities. Through his two visits to Italy, and his contact with such brilliant renaissance artists like his contemporaries Mantegna, Leonardo and Giovanni Bellini (1430-1516), Durer was stimulated and influenced to develop his unique style.

While looking for two specific artworks to compare and contrast, I first found Durer's widely familiar work 'Hands of an Apostle' or 'The Praying Hands', which was finished down to the last detail. Above a network of veins the somewhat thin but gnarled fingers point skywards and come to a 'point like a Gothic arch'. I then came across Brett Whiteley's 'My God, My God…Why…' which depicts Christ on the crucifix with his arms and his largely out of proportion hands held sky ward. The hands are cartoon-like and are grotesquely distorted becoming a strong image of intense of pain, so much so that the rest of the painting becomes seemingly insignificant. Whiteley used his ability to distort an image to intensify the feeling of the picture to its full extent but he also knew he could rely on his tremendous skill as a draughtsman to rescue him if he took it too far. Durer however, made constant attempts to find a general proportional law that held constant with all varieties of human physique. He diagrammed the proportions of different parts of the body according to a fixed scale. It is understood that the hands were a section of a larger work and that Durers capacity for scale meant that each part could be placed like a jigsaw and be accurately in proportion. He collected his thoughts on human proportion into four volumes of books called Treatise on Human Proportions. He only completed two before his death in1528.

Whiteley's paintings most of the time, were quite highly sexualised, in fact, Whiteley was the first Australian artist to directly portray sex in art. I think Durer would be quite disgusted with Whiteley's blunt theme, but Whiteley was more intrigued with the manner not the subject matter of the artwork. Whiteley seemed to have a cool sentimental detachment with the themes in his paintings. For instance, in his work Head of Christie which is a portrait of an English murderer, instead of concentrating on directly painting a picture of death and despair to repulse the viewer, he simply uses a subtle form of composition and distortion of the face to entice the viewer to look at the face of a murderer. He aims not to shock or repulse but to intrigue. It's interesting in that Whiteley's pictures of nudes, giraffes and monkeys seem to have the same emotional level as The Head of Christie. Durer on the other hand chose his theme quite carefully. His main themes were usually spiritual or religious, although he like Whiteley, also had a keen eye for landscapes and some sort of connection with animals. Almost all of Durer's paintings or etchings of animals or landscapes were so detailed that they could perhaps be accurate enough for a botanist or biologist to use today. I think, Durer's connection with animals sometimes led him to mix his themes, as in his Virgin with a Multitude of Animals, 1503, where he surrounds the Virgin with a gathering of gentle animals including a parrot, a fox, a poodle, some owls and a crab.

One of Durer's favourite themes however, was himself. His self-portraits were all precisely finished and all portrayed him as a handsome young man. He completed four self-portraits during his life the first of which when he was only thirteen. It is an amazingly accomplished self-portrait and was not only his earliest known work but is also the first recognised self-portrait in German art. The last self-portrait he painted was at the age of 29 in 1500, where he deliberately portrayed himself in the style of a painting of Christ. He idealised his own features to resemble that of Christ, not to show himself as the reincarnation of Jesus, which to a good Christian would be blasphemous, but he believed that his gift of art was god given. Although Durer often painted self-portraits he hardly ever painted his wife, and when he did they weren't that flattering. Whiteley nevertheless, used his girlfriend as a constant theme in his art. He painted her not to show her in a sense but to show the female form.

Two widely different personalities in two vastly different eras, the fifteenth Century and the twentieth Century have shown me how the quality of draughtsmanship and line can have such a strong impact on the viewer of the figure. Whilst Durer struggled in the changing time of the German Gothic era to the beginning of the wonderfully flamboyant Italian Renaissance, Whitely was also an artist of a changing era. His paintings especially the abstracted figure encapsulated the sexual revolution of the sixties and enriched the Australian art tradition. They both were drawn to the human and animal form and while Durer embraced realism in the time where developing science was the changing the way the world saw itself, Whiteley was seeking the abstract when science was being questioned, and the search for more inner truths was a sign of the times. Their construction of the figure displays all these concepts.





Bibliography:

GAUNT, William, "Everyman's Dictionary of Pictorial Art",Vol 1. 1962. K.M Dent and Sons. London

GLEESON James (ed) 'Masterpieces of Australian Painting',1969. Landsdowne Press Melbourne

HORTON, M. "Australian Painters of the '70's", 1975 Ure Smith Press, Sydney

HUGHES, Robert, "The Art of Australia" 1966 Penguin Aus.

RUSSELL Francis, "The World Of Durer c. 1471-1528" 1967 Time Life Inc. NY.

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