ALBRECHT DÜRER (14711528), Knight, Death and the Devil Christie’s


Knight, Death, and the Devil, Albrecht Dürer, 1513. engraving, h 246mm × w 188mm More details. This is Dürer's most famous print, and it has been subject to widely differing interpretations in the course of time. The 'christian knight', the tireless warrior who cannot be deterred from his path, is probably depicted here. Neither Death.

The knight, death and the devil hires stock photography and images Alamy


In 1513-1514 Dürer produced three exceptional copper engravings—Knight, Death and Devil, Saint Jerome in His Study, and Melencolia I—that have come to be known collectively as the Meisterstiche, or Master Engravings. Some scholars have interpreted the master engravings as complementary examples of different virtues—moral (the Knight), theological (Saint Jerome), and intellectual.

Albrecht Dürer Knight, Death and the Devil (Circa 1600) MutualArt


Highlights. Detail. The Knight, Death and the Devil. In this brilliant depiction of calm, steely resistance to evil and mortality, the German artist Albrecht Dürer was probably influenced by the writings of his friend, the humanist philosopher Erasmus of Rotterdam who wrote in A Handbook for the Christian Soldier in 1504: 'Because you must.

Lot Albrecht Dürer, Knight, Death, and the Devil, Heliogravure


In "Knight, Death and the Devil", the lower left corner is of utmost significance in understanding the scene. In Renaissance iconography the skull represents Adam and mankind's sin. It rests on a stump picturing the prophecy of the Second Adam: "There shall come forth a shoot from the stump of Jesse." (Is. 11:1) Leaning directly in.

Knight, Death, and the Devil Museum of Fine Arts, Boston


Knight, Death, and the Devil. 1513. Albrecht Dürer. German, 1471-1528. Albrecht Dürer's masterful engraving encourages the viewer to reflect on the inevitability of their mortality. Lurking behind the knight on his muscular warhorse, the skeletal, deteriorating figure of Death sits astride his aging steed and demonstrates the running.

Albrecht Dürer (14711528) , Knight, Death and the Devil (Bartsch 98; Meder, Hollstein 74


di Simone Salandra. cover: "The Knight, Death and the Devil", remake by Cornelis-Van-Dalem. The famous engraving by Albrecht Durer entitled "The Knight, Death and the Devil" can be dated to 1513. Although Dürer never endorsed this hypothesis, it is part of an ideal triptych, of burin engravings, similar in size and topics, but profoundly.

Knight Death and the Devil by Albrecht Durer


Adoration of the Trinity. Knight, Death and the Devil was completed in 1513 A.D., by Albrecht Dürer. The engraving was created during the artist's Nuremberg period, when he served the Emperor Maximilian and lived in Nuremberg, devoting himself to engraving work. Unlike many works of the time, it was not created as a commission.

Knight Death And The Devil Print by Albrecht Durer


This virtuoso engraving by Dürer shows a lone knight riding through an oppressive landscape. A dog runs at his horse's feet, and Death holds aloft an hourglass while the Devil stalks behind. Although the meaning of this print has not been satisfactorily explained, it is clear that the message is an ominous one. A skull, a reminder of death, lies on a tree trunk in the left foreground, and a.

Albrecht Dürer detail 1513 Knight Death and Devil Stock Photo Alamy


Knight, Death and the Devil, published in 1513, is a copper engraving produced by Albrecht Dürer at his Nüremburg workshop during the reign of Emperor Maximilian I. The engraving, created during a period in the German artist's career when his main focus was on copper plate printmaking, is considered by some art historians to belong to a.

Knight, Death and the Devil, 1513 Painting by Albrecht Durer


The knight, Death and the Devil: Directed by Beppe Cino. With Paolo Bonacelli, Mirella D'Angelo, Piero Vida, Jeanne Mas. A family of the three fall into a dark and disturbing nightmare after meeting the mysterious Orlok and the seductive punk girl Patty.

Albrecht Dürer Knight, Death and the Devil The Metropolitan Museum of Art


Knight Death and the Devil. Albrecht Durer. Leonardo da Vinci. Florence. From 1512 to 1520 Albrecht Durer began to explore the deep recesses of Classical antiquity, drawing on his time spent in Italy. The Knight, Death and the Devil copper engraving was one of three works he produced that are still widely regarded today as his 'Master Engravings'.

Albrecht Dürer, Knight, Death and the Devil, engraving, 1513 Stock Photo Alamy


Dürer's Knight, Death, and the Devil is one of three large prints of 1513-14 known as his Meisterstiche (master engravings). The other two are Melancholia I and Saint Jerome in His Study. Though not a trilogy in the strict sense, the prints are closely interrelated and complementary, corresponding to the three kinds of virtue in medieval.

Albrecht Dürer , Knight, Death and the Devil (B. 98; M., Holl. 74; S.M.S. 69) Christie's


He went on to produce independent prints, such as the engraving Adam and Eve (1504; 19.73.1), and small, self-contained groups of images, such as the so-called Meisterstiche (master engravings) featuring Knight, Death, and the Devil (1513; 43.106.2), Saint Jerome in His Study (1514), and Melencolia I (1514; 43.106.1), which were intended more.

Knight Death and the Devil Painting by Albrecht Durer Pixels


In Knight, Death, and the Devil Albrecht Dürer imagined an armored rider encountering two gruesome apparitions: a putrefying figure of Death brandishing an hourglass as a reminder of life's brevity and a horned and snouted Devil. Like Melencolia I, this is an ambiguous image that has inspired several interpretations.Most frequently, the main figure is described as a heroic Christian knight.

Albrecht Dürer Knight, Death, and the Devil The Metropolitan Museum of Art


knight, death, and the devil speaks to dürer's own fears. Death had lingered around Dürer since he was a child. Of his 17 siblings, only two lived to adulthood.

The Knight Death and the Devil 1513 From reproduction in Albrecht Durer Kupferstiche Holbein


Knight, Death, and the Devil. In this tour de force engraving, considered one of his three greatest "masterworks," Albrecht Dürer portrayed a mounted soldier who resolutely forges through a dark gorge, ignoring a horned devil in his path. Confronted by Death itself, crowned with snakes and holding an hourglass indicating mortality, the.

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