ALBRECHT DÜRER (1471-1528)
ALBRECHT DÜRER (1471-1528)

The Ravisher

Details
ALBRECHT DÜRER (1471-1528)
The Ravisher
engraving, circa 1495, on laid paper, watermark fragment Bull's Head with Flower (Meder 62), a very fine, early Meder b impression of this rare print, printing with much burr in the twigs at upper left and elsewhere, with a pronounced plate tone and much relief, trimmed to or just outside the borderline
Sheet 114 x 103 mm.
Literature
Bartsch 92; Meder, Hollstein 76; Schoch Mende Scherbaum

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Tim Schmelcher
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Lot Essay

The Ravisher, the artist's first engraving, is firmly rooted in the 15th century Northern tradition, both in manner and subject. The irregular, nervous lines - so well suited to the violent subject - are more akin to earlier 15th century prints such as the drypoints of the Master of the House Book, than to the artist's later, highly controlled engraving style. The subject derives from a popular theme of the period, the Garden of Love, yet Dürer turned it into something altogether different and sinister: a young lady - married, as we can see from the cap she is wearing - has travelled to a secluded place outside the city to secretly meet with a lover. But this couple is not simply an ill-assorted couple - she finds herself having a rendezvous with Death himself, and the print is thereby a moral warning against the dangers of infidelity.

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