Albrecht Durer Essay, Research Paper
Albrecht D?rer was born on May 21, 1471 in Nuremberg, Germany. His father Albrecht D?rer the elder, a goldsmith of lower middle class income, sent him to attend Latin school at St. Lorenz. Later D?rer served as an apprentice to his father. Right before becoming an apprentice of the painter Michael Wolgemut, in 1484, he completed some of his earliest work at around the age of 13, which was one of his self -portrait series. In 1494 D?rer increased social standing as a result of his arranged marriage to the daughter of a prosperous machine and instrument maker.
Albrecht D?rer was so great an artist, so searching and all-encompassing a thinker, that he was almost a Renaissance in his own right. D?rer was exceptionally learned, and the only northern artist who fully absorbed the sophisticated Italian dialogues between scientific theory and art. He also rejected the Gothic art and philosophy of Germany’s past, becoming the first great Protestant painter. 1494 was also the year he visited Venice to learn about the new Renaissance philosophy and art techniques. In Venice, D?rer had made drawings of exotic figures and animals and had done many nature studies. There he met Jacopo de’Barbari, whose figures, constructed according to geometrical methods, inspired D?rer to a lifelong study of human proportions. In 1495 he set himself in his own workshop, working mostly as a draftsman doing wood- and copper- engraving, but also making altar pieces. D?rer personally undertook all aspects of production-design, cutting, printing, and publishing. He used the medium of engraving for subjects that
reflected his theoretical interests, and used other mediums of drawing for his more intimate works, such as, portraits of family, friends, and patrons.
D?rer’s portrait of his mother, a charcoal drawing made in 1514, is one of many portraits of family, friends, and patrons in various media. In this drawing, D?rer captures the culmination of the quiet suffering she has endured most of her life due to life threatening illnesses. He has lightly gestured in the characteristics of his mother’s clothing and face. D?rer gives his gestural drawing direction through his use of defining contour lines, w
D?rer was immersed in the great realistic tradition of Netherlander art and the mysticism of German art, but he also sought to encompass the monumental and idealizing tendencies of the Italian Renaissance. Though he failed to achieve a true synthesis, the vitality and expressive force of his art make him one of the greatest artists of all times.
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