... - The Strange World of Albrecht Durer
... - The Strange World of Albrecht Durer
... - The Strange World of Albrecht Durer
This exhibition is organized by the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, Massachusetts
BELOW: Knight, Death, and the Devil, 1513. Engraving. RIGHT: The Beast with Two Horns Like a Lamb from The Apocalypse, c. 149697. Woodcut.
The Apocalypse
Drers The Apocalypse series chronicles the end of the world as foretold in the Book of Revelation, the last section of the Christian Bible. The fifteen woodcuts included in The Apocalypse series are teeming with monsters, devils, angels, and saints drawn from the artists fertile imagination. In his woodcut The Beast with Two Horns Like a Lamb, for example, Drer merged several different textual motifs into one potent image: a seven-headed monster emerges from the sea to trample the worshipers who have assembled. Blood rains on the beast, and a god-like figure holds a scythe to cut down the blasphemous, accompanied by angels brandishing instruments of retribution. Originally published as a book in 1498, two years before a new century dawned, these woodcuts echoed the anxieties of a generation at a time when prophesies of impending doom circulated widely. Today, these prints retain their dramatic impact, exploring both the real and the unreal, giving visible form to religious anxieties and the monstrous beasts that dwell in the gothic recesses of our minds.
Symbolic Space
In many of his works Drer carefully arranged the elements of an image to create the illusion of three-dimensional space, which served to intensify the drama of his narrative. This interest in carving out perspectival space is manifested in his 1511 series of woodcuts, The Life of the Virgin, and other prints created during this period. These works chronicle the life of Mary, from the courtship of her parents to her assumption into heaven. The narratives unfold in architectural and landscape settings, which frame the action and heighten its subdued drama. The interplay between outside and inside, inclusion and exclusion, and heaven and earth are key to understanding the events that unfold within these invented spaces. In Christ Taking Leave of His Mother this tension is symbolized by the three despairing women enclosed within the wooden structure while Christ moves away from them to confront his fate in the outside world. In contrast to the highly emotive and chaotic compositions of The Apocalypse woodcuts, these are calm, contemplative, and earthbound.
Gender Anxiety
Drers focus on gender relationships ranged from Adam and Evethe biblical first coupleto suggestive dream states, to violent and erotic mythological creatures. The tension expressed in these prints centers on the perceived power struggle between women and men and the threat of unleashed passions. The shifting meanings of these works is suggested by their frequently changing titles: the luminous nude Nemesis was titled The Great Fortune in the seventeenth century, and The Four Witches, which acquired its title in 1675, has also been referred to as The Four Naked Women and The Judgment of Paris. Nemesis, a winged figure floating above a panoramic landscape, has been described as symbolizing either retribution, luck, or both, depending on the cultural context of its viewer. The impact of these prints is no less powerful today, when issues of gender equality remain fraught with tension in every sphere of life.
Enigma
The enigmatic nature of Drers printsincluding Knight, Death, and the Devil; Melencolia I; The Desperate Man; and his series of knots has encouraged a wide range of interpretive analysis over the centuries. Recent scholarship has incorporated references to philosophy, popular culture, literature, religious doctrine, and feminism in attempts to fasten meaning on these curious images. The engraving Melencolia I, for example, has been the subject of countless studies deconstructing its contemplative protagonist and her surroundings. The search for disguised symbolism has been one of the most common methods used to unlock elements in Drers compositions, but this approach has its limitations. Whether a monkey symbolizes base passion or a dog suggests faithful devotion depends on the questions we bring to them. Drers vast imagination allows each successive generation to interpret these works anew.
LEFT: Nemesis (The Great Fortune), c. 1502. Engraving. ABOVE: Melencolia I, 1514. Engraving.