The High Renaissance
 
&

Mannerism

 


 

 


Albrecht Altdorfer
 
 
 
 

 

Albrecht Altdorfer

born c. 1480
died Feb. 12, 1538, Regensburg [Germany]


German painter, printmaker, and draftsman who was one of the founders of landscape painting.

Altdorfer spent most of his life in Regensburg, becoming a citizen in 1505 and in later years serving as official architect of the city and a member of its inner council. He was the guiding spirit of the Danube school of painting. His early figure paintings show a growing preoccupation with landscape, until in “St. George and the Dragon” (1510) the knight is practically overwhelmed by the primeval forest in which he performs his feat. With the “Regensburg Landscape” (c. 1522–25) and other works, Altdorfer painted the first pure landscapes—i.e., landscape scenes containing no human figures whatsoever—since antiquity. His favourite subject was the leafy and impenetrable forests of Germany and Austria. He was also among the first to depict sunset lighting and picturesque ruins in twilight. Several of his altar panels in the Church of St. Florian near Linz, completed in 1518, depicting the Passion of Christ and the martyrdom of St. Sebastian, are night scenes in which he exploited the possibilities of torch light, star light, or twilight with unusual brilliance. Altdorfer's masterpiece, the “Battle of Alexander at Issus” (1529; Alte Pinakothek, Munich), is both a battle scene of incredible detail and a highly dramatic and expressive landscape.

The fantastic element that pervaded Altdorfer's paintings was also prominent in his drawings, most of which were donein black with white highlights on brown or blue-gray paper. His engravings and woodcuts, usually miniatures, are distinguished by their playful inventiveness. Late in his career he used the new medium of etching to produce a series of landscapes.

          
           
 


Mary with the Child

1520-25
Wood, 49,4 x 35,5 cm
Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest
 

 

 


The Flagellation of Christ

1518
Ol on wood
Augustiner Chorherrenstift, St Florian bei Linz

 
 

Loth and his Daughters

1537
Oil on limewood, 107,5 x 189 cm
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna
 

 


Loth and his Daughters
1537
Oil on limewood, 107,5 x 189 cm
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna



 

Christ on the Cross

c. 1520
Wood, 75 x 57,5 cm
Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest



 

Christ on the Cross
(detail)
c. 1520
Wood
Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest