
Albrecht Dürer
1471–1528 · Holy Roman Empire · German Renaissance
The story
In 1515 a live rhinoceros arrived in Lisbon, a gift travelling from a sultan in India to the King of Portugal, the first such animal anyone in Europe had seen in over 1,000 years, since the Roman arenas. Albrecht Dürer, up in Nuremberg in Germany, never went near it. What reached him was a letter and a rough sketch passed along the merchant networks. From that secondhand description he cut a woodcut of the beast, and it is magnificently, confidently wrong. The skin is rendered as bolted plates of armour, a little extra horn twists up from the shoulders, the legs are scaled like a lizard's. He even printed a line of text across the top vouching for its accuracy. The real rhinoceros drowned soon after in a shipwreck off Italy, so almost nobody could correct him.
Dürer's armoured version became the rhinoceros in the European imagination, copied into schoolbooks and encyclopaedias for the next 250 years. And that is the point about Dürer: he understood the printed image as a new kind of power. A painting hangs in one room, but a woodcut or an engraving could be pulled in hundreds and sold across the continent, and he pushed that medium further than anyone alive, signing every sheet with a monogram, an A cradling a D, that worked like a modern trademark.
He was a Nuremberg goldsmith's son who taught himself to think like a mathematician about proportion and perspective, and he lived at the exact moment the Reformation broke over Germany. He admired Martin Luther and grieved in his diary over a false rumour that Luther had been seized. The engraving many take for his summit, Melencolia I from 1514, is a puzzle still argued over, a brooding winged figure surrounded by the tools of geometry, sitting idle among them.
Works
58 works
The RhinocerosAlbrecht Dürer, 1515
Self-Portrait with Fur-Trimmed RobeAlbrecht Dürer, 1500
Melencolia IAlbrecht Dürer, 1514
The Four ApostlesAlbrecht Dürer, 1526
Adoration of the MagiAlbrecht Dürer, 1504
Knight, Death, and the DevilAlbrecht Dürer, 1513
Feast of the RosaryAlbrecht Dürer, 1506
Self-PortraitAlbrecht Dürer, 1498
St. Jerome in His StudyAlbrecht Dürer, 1514
Portrait of the Artist Holding a ThistleAlbrecht Dürer, 1493
Heller AltarpieceAlbrecht Dürer, 1500
Adoration of the TrinityAlbrecht Dürer, 1511
Christ Among the DoctorsAlbrecht Dürer, 1506
Martyrdom of the Ten ThousandAlbrecht Dürer, 1508
Paumgartner altarpieceAlbrecht Dürer, 1500
Portrait of Hieronymus HolzschuherAlbrecht Dürer, 1526
Saint Jerome in His StudyAlbrecht Dürer, 1521
St. Jerome in the WildernessAlbrecht Dürer, 1496
Emperor Maximilian IAlbrecht Dürer, 1519
Haller MadonnaAlbrecht Dürer, 1495
AvariceAlbrecht Dürer, 1507
Lamentation of ChristAlbrecht Dürer, 1500
Mary and ChildAlbrecht Dürer, 1512
Jabach AltarpieceAlbrecht Dürer, 1504
Portrait of a Venetian WomanAlbrecht Dürer, 1505