Dürer's Rhinoceros
The Rhinoceros | |
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Washington, DC |
Dürer's Rhinoceros is the name commonly given to a woodcut executed by German artist Albrecht Dürer in 1515.[a] Dürer never saw the actual rhinoceros, which was the first living example seen in Europe since Roman times. Instead the image is based on an anonymous written description and brief sketch of an Indian rhinoceros brought to Lisbon in 1515.[2] Later that year, the King of Portugal, Manuel I, sent the animal as a gift for Pope Leo X, but it died in a shipwreck off the coast of Italy. Another live rhinoceros was not seen again in Europe until Abada arrived from India to the court of Sebastian of Portugal in 1577.[3]
Dürer's woodcut is not an accurate representation. It depicts an animal with hard plates that cover its body like sheets of armor, with a gorget at the throat, a solid-looking breastplate, and what appear to be rivets along the seams; there is a small twisted horn on its back, scaly legs and saw-like rear quarters. None of these features are present in a real rhinoceros,[4][5] although the Indian rhinoceros does have deep folds in its skin that can look like armor from a distance.
Dürer's woodcut became very popular in Europe and was copied many times in the following three centuries. It was regarded as a true representation of a rhinoceros into the late 18th century, and it has been said of Dürer's woodcut that "probably no animal picture has exerted such a profound influence on the arts".[6] Eventually, it was supplanted by more realistic drawings and paintings, particularly those of Clara the rhinoceros, who toured Europe in the 1740s and 1750s.
The rhinoceros
On 20 May 1515, an Indian rhinoceros named Ulysses arrived in Lisbon from the Far East.
After a relatively fast voyage of 120 days, the rhinoceros was finally unloaded in Portugal, near the site where the Manueline Belém Tower was under construction. The tower was later decorated with gargoyles shaped as rhinoceros heads under its corbels.[12] A rhinoceros had not been seen in Europe since Roman times:[2] and was examined by scholars and the curious, and letters describing the fantastic creature were sent to correspondents throughout Europe. The earliest known image of the animal illustrates a poemetto by Florentine Giovanni Giacomo Penni, published in Rome on 13 July 1515, fewer than eight weeks after its arrival in Lisbon.[13]
It was housed in King Manuel's menagerie at the Ribeira Palace in Lisbon, separate from his elephants and other large beasts at the Estaus Palace. Manuel arranged a fight with a young elephant from his collection, to test the account by Pliny the Elder that the elephant and the rhinoceros are bitter enemies,[2] but the elephant fled the field in panic before a single blow was struck.[2][14]
Manuel decided to give the rhinoceros as a gift to the
After resuming its journey, the ship was wrecked in a sudden storm as it passed through the narrows of Porto Venere, north of La Spezia on the coast of Liguria. The rhinoceros, chained and shackled to the deck to keep it under control, was unable to swim to safety and drowned. The carcass of the rhinoceros was recovered near Villefranche, and its hide was returned to Lisbon, where it was stuffed. Some reports say that the mounted skin was sent to Rome, arriving in February 1516, to be exhibited impagliato (Italian for "stuffed with straw"), although such a feat would have challenged 16th-century methods of taxidermy, which were still primitive. If a stuffed rhinoceros did arrive in Rome, its fate remains unknown: it might have been removed to Florence by the Medici or destroyed in the 1527 sack of Rome. In any event, there was not the popular sensation in Rome that the living beast had caused in Lisbon, although a rhinoceros was depicted in contemporary paintings in Rome by Giovanni da Udine and Raphael.[17][18]
Dürer's woodcut
The German inscription on the woodcut is largely drawing from Pliny's account[25] and reads:
On the first of May in the year 1513 AD [sic], the powerful King of Portugal, Manuel of Lisbon, brought such a living animal from India, called the rhinoceros. This is an accurate representation. It is the colour of a speckled tortoise,[1][d] and is almost entirely covered with thick scales. It is the size of an elephant but has shorter legs and is almost invulnerable. It has a strong pointed horn on the tip of its nose, which it sharpens on stones. It is the mortal enemy of the elephant. The elephant is afraid of the rhinoceros, for, when they meet, the rhinoceros charges with its head between its front legs and rips open the elephant's stomach, against which the elephant is unable to defend itself. The rhinoceros is so well-armed that the elephant cannot harm it. It is said that the rhinoceros is fast, impetuous and cunning.[26]
Dürer's woodcut is not an accurate representation of a rhinoceros. He depicts an animal with hard plates that cover its body like sheets of
A second woodcut was executed by Hans Burgkmair in Augsburg around the same time as Dürer's. Burgkmair corresponded with merchants in Lisbon and Nuremberg, but it is not clear whether he had access to a letter or sketch as Dürer did, perhaps even Dürer's sources, or saw the animal himself in Portugal.[29] His image is truer to life, omitting Dürer's more fanciful additions and including the shackles and chain used to restrain the rhinoceros.[29] However, Dürer's woodcut is more powerful and eclipsed Burgkmair's in popularity. Only one impression (example) of Burgkmair's image has survived,[30] whereas Dürer's print survives in many impressions. Dürer produced a first edition of his woodcut in 1515.[31] Many further printings followed after Dürer's death in 1528, including two in the 1540s, and two more in the late 16th century.[32]
The block passed into the hands of the Amsterdam printer and cartographer
Despite its errors, the image remained very popular,
A similar rhinoceros, in
The pre-eminent position of Dürer's image and its derivatives declined from the mid 18th century when more live rhinoceroses were brought to Europe, shown to the curious public, and depicted in more accurate representations.
The semiotician Umberto Eco argues (fetching the idea from E.H. Gombrich, Art and Illusion: A Study in the Psychology of Pictorial Representation, 1961) that Dürer's "scales and imbricated plates" became a necessary element of depicting the animal, even to those who might know better, because "they knew that only these conventionalized graphic signs could denote «rhinoceros» to the person interpreting the iconic sign." He also notes that the skin of a rhinoceros is rougher than it visually appears and that such plates and scales portray this non-visual information to a degree.[44]
Until the late 1930s, Dürer's image appeared in school textbooks in Germany as a faithful image of the rhinoceros;[6] and it remains a powerful artistic influence. It was one of the inspirations for Salvador Dalí; a reproduction of the woodcut hung in his childhood home and he used the image in several of his works.[45]
Sale history
Although very popular, few prints have survived and impressions of the first edition are rare. A fine example was sold at Christie's New York in 2013 for $866,500, setting a new auction record for the artist.[37][46]
See also
References
Notes
- ^ Some sources erroneously say 1513, copying a typographical error made by Dürer in one of his original drawings and perpetuated in his woodcut.[1]
- ^ One later acquired by Sir Hans Sloane and now held by the British Museum.[23]
- ^ The woodcut was cut on the block by a specialist craftsman known as a Formschneider, for Dürer's approval. This may well have been Hieronymus Andreae, who Dürer was using on other projects at this time, especially those with inscriptions.[24]
- ^ Some versions translate Krot as "toad", but Schildkrot most likely refers to a tortoise.[1]
- ^ Dürer was living near the armourer's quarter in Nuremberg, Schmeidegasse, and was designing armour at about the same time; this aspect may, therefore, be a creative conceit.[6]
Citations
- ^ a b c Bedini, p. 121.
- ^ ISSN 1423-3967. Retrieved 29 October 2022.
- ^ Clarke (1986), chapter 2
- ^ a b Group of History and Theory of Science – Dürer's Rhinoceros Archived 10 July 2006 at the Wayback Machine , State University of Campinas, Brazil.
- ^ a b c Dürer's Rhinoceros Archived 5 May 2006 at the Wayback Machine , Kallisti Digital Publishing, 7 March 2003.
- ^ a b c Clarke (1986), p. 20
- ^ Bedini (1997), p. 112.
- PMID 17742471.
- ^ Clarke (1986), p. 16.
- ^ Bedini (1997), p. 113.
- ISBN 978-9048552252.
- ^ Clarke (1986), p. 19, for a photograph of a gargoyle.
- ^ Giovanni Giacomo Penni, Forma e natura e costumi de lo rinocerote (...). See Ugo Serani, Etiopicas 2 (2006) ISSN 1698-689X [1] for the original text in Italian and a translation into Spanish.
- .
- ^ Vogt, Fabian. "Wie das Nashorn Clara zum Superstar des 18. Jahrhunderts wurde". Neue Zürcher Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 27 October 2022.
- ^ Bedini (1997), p. 127.
- ^ Bedini (1997), p. 132.
- ^ a b Gessner's Hyena and the Telephone Game, Manda Clair Jost, 2002 (PDF, 21 pages).
- ^ Clarke (1986), p. 181
- ^ Bedini (1997), p. 120
- ^ Article (pt) by Luís Tirapicos at Instituto Camões
- ISBN 0-226-46733-3.
- ^ "drawing: Museum number SL,5218.161". British Museum. Retrieved 20 January 2023
- ^ Quammen, p. 204
- Naturalis Historia.
- , chapter 3.2, illustration 10, November 1996. (in French); and a similar translation in Clarke (1986), p. 20
- ISBN 1-84354-010-X
- ^ Commentary Archived 10 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine on a plate from Conrad Gessner's Mammals, folio 131 verso, from the Humanities Media Interaction Project, Keio University, Japan.
- ^ a b Bedini (1997), p. 121.
- Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna.
- ^ Wills, Matthew. "Dürer's Rhinoceros and the Birth of Print Media". 28 June 2016. Retrieved 6 February 2023
- ^ a b Clarke (1986), p. 23
- ^ a b Quammen, p. 206
- ^ a b "Rhinocerus (Rhinoceros)". British Museum.
- ^ a b Goldman (2012), p. 6
- ^ The Journeyman Artist Archived 2 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine , Richard Anderton, University of the West of England, at the 3rd Impact International Printmaking Conference, Cape Town, South Africa, 2003.
- ^ a b "Sale 2778 Lot 50". Christie's.
- ^ Bedini (1997), p. 192
- ^ Bedini (1997), p. 193
- ^ See File:Durer's Rhinoceros on Cathedral Door, Pisa C17th.jpg.
- ^ Clarke, chapter 2 and 3.
- ^ Clarke (1986), p. 64
- ^ Alperson (1992), p. 80
- ISBN 9780253202178.
- ^ "Salvador Dalí (Spanish, 1904–1989) Chair de poule rhinocérontique, ou Rhinocéros cosmique". Bonhams. 2013.
- ^ "Dürer: Masterpieces from a Private Collection". Christie's, 2013. Retrieved 20 January 2023
Sources
- Alperson, Philip. The Philosophy of the Visual Arts. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992. ISBN 978-0-1950-5975-5
- Bedini, Silvano. The Pope's Elephant. Manchester: Carcanet Press, 1997. ISBN 978-0-1402-8862-9
- Clarke, T. H. The Rhinoceros from Dürer to Stubbs: 1515–1799. London: Sotheby's Publications, 1986. ISBN 978-0-8566-7322-1
- Cole, F. J.; Francis Joseph. "The History of Albrecht Durer's Rhinoceros in Zoological Literature". In Underwood, Ashworth (ed.). Science, Medicine and History: Essays on the Evolution of Scientific Thought and Medical Practice, Written in Honour of Charles Singer. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1953. ISBN 978-0-4050-6624-5
- Feiman, Jesse. "The Matrix and the Meaning in Dürer's Rhinoceros". Art in Print, volume 2, no. 4, November - December 2012. JSTOR 43047078
- Goldman, Paul. Master Prints: Close-Up. London: British Museum, 2012. ISBN 978-0-7141-2679-1
- Quammen, David. The Boilerplate Rhino: Nature in the Eye of the Beholder. Scribner, 2001
Further reading
- Burzyńska, Anna. Returns of the Rhinoceros. Frankfurt am Main: Tadeusz Kantor Today, 2014
External links