| The subject matter of
this print is obscure. A Turk stands prominently in the foreground
and surveys a large cannon on a four-wheeled gun carriage. While
at this date Turkey posed a military threat to the West, it is unclear
whether Dürer is referring to a topical issue.
The modern interest in the print lies in its etching technique
and the magnificent landscape. From a high vantage point framed
by a tree, our eye is drawn to the buildings below, where a path
takes us through a field. A horse grazes there in the sun. Beyond
the village is a prospect of mountains, ships and the sea. Landscape
was not as yet an established subject for painters, but this comprehensive
view stimulated other artists to explore the genre (for example,
Albrecht Altdorfer).
This print was the last and most ambitious of Dürer's six
etchings. Close inspection shows that the acid has bitten lines
of uniform thickness, so that the outlines of objects are no heavier
than the detail and modelling inside. Shapes emerge from the dense
pattern of lines, but only after patient looking. See, for example,
the two figures behind the cannon.
Despite the large editions that can be printed from an etched
iron plate, Dürer did not persist with the technique, as it
did not have the refinement and variety of marks that he could
achieve with engraving.
Bequeathed by George Salting.
Further Reading/Sources:
PD 1910-2-12-308 (Dodgson 86; B.99) Department of Prints and
Drawings
G. Bartrum, German Renaissance prints, 1490-1550, exh. cat. (London,
The British Museum Press, 1995), no. 40, pp. 55-6
D. Landau and P. Parshall, The Renaissance print 1470-1550 (New
Haven and London, Yale University Press, 1994), p. 329
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