This is one of a group of drawings which represent the countryside
around Nuremberg and were probably made soon after Dürer returned
from his first visit to Italy. The small building has been identified
from an atlas published by Paul Pfinzinger about 1595 (Staatsarchiv,
Nuremberg as the Weyerhaüsslein ('small pond house')
at St Johannis, which in Dürer's day was just outside the city
walls, but now is a suburb of Nuremberg.
Further Reading/Sources:
PD Sloane 5218-165 Department of Prints and Drawings
G. Bartrum
(ed.), Albrecht Dürer and his legacy: the graphic work of
a Renaissance artist (London and N.J., The British Museum Press
and Princeton University Press, 2002), no. 193
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