Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,716,650 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

"Il faut cultiver notre jardin" (1).


"This I drew, using a mirror; it is my own likeness, in the year 1484, when I was still a child," wrote Albrecht Durer about his first self-portrait, sketched with great confidence and skill when he was 13 years old (1). Fascinated by his own image, he continued to paint it throughout his life. His faithful dog once barked and wagged its tail at a newly completed self-portrait of his master, related his friend humanist scholar Konrad Celtis (1459-1508), repeating a story based on the anecdote from Roman writer Pliny (1).

Though born into the goldsmith trade on his father's side of the family, Durer also apprenticed with painter and woodcut woodcut

Design printed from a plank of wood incised parallel to the vertical axis of the wood's grain. One of the oldest methods of making prints, it was used in China to decorate textiles from the 5th century.
 illustrator Michael Wolgemut Michael Wolgemut (formerly spelt Wohlgemuth) (1434 – 1519), German painter and printmaker, was born and died in Nuremberg. Life
Little is known of Wolgemut's private life.
, who introduced him to commercial bookmaking bookmaking

Gambling practice of determining odds and receiving and paying off bets on the outcome of sporting events and other competitions. Horse racing is perhaps most closely associated with bookmaking, but boxing, baseball, football, basketball, and other sports have
. At age 19, he left his native Numberg to wander the world and improve his skills, as was the custom after successful apprenticeships. In Basel, Strasbourg, Vienna, and Venice, he came to know and excel in diverse styles and techniques. A painter, as well as master printmaker and engraver, he was the first serious artist to work in watercolor. His landscapes, painted directly from nature, were matched in his day only by those of Leonardo da Vinci Leonardo da Vinci (də vĭn`chē, Ital. lāōnär`dō dä vēn`chē), 1452–1519, Italian painter, sculptor, architect, musician, engineer, and scientist, b. near Vinci, a hill village in Tuscany. .

"The art of measurement being the foundation of all painting," he wrote, "I propose to give the elements thereof and to explain its principles to young people wishing to educate themselves in their art, so that they may confidently start measuring with a pair of compasses and ruler, thereby recognizing and having before their eyes the genuine truth...." (2). An artist working by the rule of thumb, without theoretical foundation, Durer maintained, was "a wild, unpruned tree," in need of the objective and rational standards of the Renaissance (3).

These standards, acquired during his travels abroad, particularly Italy, and brought back to Germany, he also embraced in his personal life. A mathematician and humanist, he sought knowledge across diverse fields. An innovator and tradesman, he applied his artistic skills to new technologies and the production of high quality prints for the open market. His radical techniques caught the attention of the intellectual elite of his day. His closest friend and mentor was one of Nurnberg's most distinguished scholars, Willibald Pirckheimer Willibald Pirckheimer (December 5, 1470, Eichstätt, Bavaria - December 22, 1530) was a German Renaissance lawyer, author and Renaissance humanist, a wealthy and prominent figure in Nuremberg in the 16th century, and a member of the governing City Council for two periods. , translator of Hellenic texts into Latin and German. Durer's copper plate portrait of Pirckheimer, created from printed graphics, contained the inscription "Man lives through his intellect; all else will belong to death" (4).

"What beauty is I know not," Durer pondered in his Book on Human Proportions. "In some things we consider that as beautiful which elsewhere would lack beauty." Beauty as the goal of art continued to excite his imagination and later featured in his treatises on measurement and fortification fortification, system of defense structures for protection from enemy attacks. Fortification developed along two general lines: permanent sites built in peacetime, and emplacements and obstacles hastily constructed in the field in time of war. . His drawings after Andrea Mantegna and Antonio Pollaiuolo reflected his appreciation of Italian painting, which at its peak was guided by knowledge of geometry and proportion. Near the end of his life, Mantegna heard that Durer was in Italy and sent for him, "in order to instruct Albrecht's facility and certainty of hand in his own understanding and skill" (5). But Mantegna died before Durer could reach Mantua Mantua (măn`chə, –tə), Ital. Mantova, city (1991 pop. 53,065), capital of Mantova prov. , "the saddest event in all my life" (5).

"There, where the yellow spot is located, and where I point my finger, there it hurts," Durer wrote on a pen and watercolor self-portrait he sent to a physician for consultation (6). This half-length portrait, The Sick Durer (1471-1528), likely described the painter's illness contracted during travel to the Netherlands in 1520. "In the third week after Easter I was seized by a hot fever, great weakness, nausea, and headache," he wrote in his diary, "And before, when I was in Zeeland, a strange sickness came over me, such as I have never heard of from any man, and I still have this sickness" (7). In between periods of good health, the fever periodically returned until his death at age 56.

Self-portrait with Sea Holly, on this month's cover, painted when Durer was 22, is the earliest known freestanding self-portrait. Hands are difficult to paint from a mirror image. These (cover detail) are rough, a painter's hands, cracked and smudged. Goethe, when he saw a preliminary version of the painting, recognized that they held a sprig of sea holly, a thistle-like plant regarded an aphrodisiac aphrodisiac

Any of various forms of stimulation thought to arouse sexual excitement. They may be psychophysiological (arousing the senses of sight, touch, smell, or hearing) or internal (e.g., foods, alcoholic drinks, drugs, love potions, medicinal preparations).
, which appears in other Durer works. The plant's German name means "fidelity of man," and its presence in this self-portrait could be alluding to the painter's engagement to be married around that time.

Durer's devotion to knowledge as the means to beauty and truth guided his life. In illness, he enlisted his knowledge of the human body to describe the pain, anticipating pain mapping several centuries later. He grasped that knowledge advances human life, from understanding the nature of beauty to curtailing the scourge of disease.

"He looked like a bundle of dried straw," said Pirckheimer of his dying friend, supporting speculation today that Durer had malaria, an ancient and continuing scourge (8). Newer scourges have now sprung, not the least of them HIV/AIDS HIV/AIDS Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome , a "rough thistle." Despite substantial progress in prevention and control, emerging HIV/AIDS takes a global toll, particularly among the young, the old, and the underprivileged, "a weed" still requiring of us to "get on our hands and knees and begin clearing ... away" (9).

References

(1.) Albrecht Durer. [cited 2006 Apr]. Available from http://www.artchive.com/artchive/D/durer.html

(2.) Mettais V. German paintings. In: your visit to the Louvre Louvre (l`vrə), foremost French museum of art, located in Paris. The building was a royal fortress and palace built by Philip II in the late 12th cent. . Versailles: Art Lys; 1997.

(3.) Janson HW, Janson AF. History of art. New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
: Harry N. Abrams, Inc.; 2001.

(4.) Willibald Pirckheimer. [cited 2006 Apr]. Available from http://www.kfki.hu/~/arthp/html/dddurer/2/13/5/102.html

(5.) Doorly P. Durer's melencolia I: Plato's abandoned search for the beautiful. 2004 Jun 1 [cited 2006 Apr]. Available from http://www.highbeam.com/library/docfreeprint.asp?docid=1G1:1182 34665&ctr1Info=Round19%3Mode19a%3ADocFree%3A

(6.) Schott GD. The sick Durer--a Renaissance prototype pain map. 2004 Dec 18 [cited 2006 Apr]. Available from http://bmj.bmjjottrnals.com/ cgi/content/full/329/7480/1492

(7.) Hutchison JC. Albrecht Durer. A biography. Princeton: Princeton University Press; 1990.

(8.) Roller DHD DHD Dial Home Device (Stargate)
DHD Direitos Humanos e Desenvolvimento (Human Rights and Development, Mozambique)
DHD Dahod (Railway Station, Indian) 
, editor. Perspectives in the history of science and technology For chronological accounts of the development of science and technology, see history of science and history of technology.

The history of science and technology (HST
. Norman (OK): University of Oklahoma Press The University of Oklahoma Press is the publishing arm of the University of Oklahoma. It has been in operation for over seventy-five years, and was the first university press established in the American Southwest. ; 1971.

(9.) Valdiserri RO. Weeds. In: Gardening in clay: reflections on AIDS. Ithaca (NY): Cornell University Press; 1994.

Polyxeni Potter *

* Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center. , Atlanta, Georgia USA

Address for correspondence: Polyxeni Potter, EID EID Emerging Infectious Diseases (journal)
EID Electronic Identification
EID Endpoint Identifier
EID Employee Identification
EID Ecological Interface Design
EID Earned Income Disregard
EID Education and Information Division
 Journal, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Rd NE, Mailstop D61, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA; email: PMP See point-to-multipoint and portable media player.

PMP - Portable Media Player
1@cdc.gov

(1) We must cultivate our garden. From Voltaire's Candide
COPYRIGHT 2006 U.S. National Center for Infectious Diseases
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:infectious diseases research; engraver Albrecht Durer 15th century
Author:Potter, Polyxeni
Publication:Emerging Infectious Diseases
Article Type:Cover story
Geographic Code:4EUAU
Date:Jun 1, 2006
Words:1104
Previous Article:Infectious Diseases: A Clinical Approach, 2nd Edition.(medical book)(Book review)
Next Article:Emerging infectious determinants of chronic diseases.(PERSPECTIVE)
Topics:



Related Articles
Die Fuggerkapelle bei St. Anna in Augsburg.
German Renaissance Prints: 1490-1550.
Preventing emerging infectious diseases: a strategy for the 21st century.(includes related article on the Centers for Disease Control and...
WHAT'S HAPPENING : STAGE.(L.A. LIFE)(Review)
Fifth annual Conference on New and Re-Emerging Infectious Diseases. (Conference Summary).
Emerging trends in international law concerning global infectious disease control (1). (Perspective).
Women and autoimmune diseases.(International Conference On Women And Infectious Diseases)
Plagues, public health, and politics (1).(International Conference On Emerging Infectious Diseases)
Engaging the Adolescent Mind through Visual Problem Solving.(Bookmarks)(Book Review)
Fearsome creatures and nature's Gothic.(About The Cover)(Cover Story)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles