Melancholy surrounded by the instruments of her
temperament.
The bat-like creature
flying through a night sky declares the subject of this famous
engraving: Melancolia I. That dark
temperament is personified by a female figure seated in the foreground.
The winged infant beside her is a 'genius' (in the ancient sense,
meaning an accompanying spirit).
Melancholy has wings and from her belt hang keys and a money bag,
symbolizing power and wealth. She is surrounded by measuring instruments.
Above her head is a panel of 'magic' numbers (they add up to 34
in all directions). At her feet are the tools that can fashion
the material world. Yet she does nothing: lost in thought, she
turns away from the light.
Renaissance philosophers had suggested a new interpretation for
melancholy, as the temperament of genius (in the modern sense).
Melancholy was possessed by artists, in whom 'Imagination' predominates;
'Reason' dominates scholars; while the final stage of 'Spirit'
was the preserve of theologians. If this interpretation is correct,
Dürer has presented us with a portrait of his own temperament
as an artist.
Earlier engravers had cheerfully copied the work of other artists,
but Dürer sought 'to pour out new things that had never before
been in the mind of any other man'. His originality has made this
print hard to interpret.
Gift of the National Art Collections Fund.
Further Reading/Sources:
PD 1912-12-20-2 (B.74) Department of Prints and Drawings
G. Bartrum, German Renaissance prints, 1490-1550, exh.
cat. (London, The British Museum Press, 1995), pp. 46-8, no. 33
E. Panofsky, The life and art of Albrecht Dürer (Princeton
University Press, 1945, 1971), pp. 157-71
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. 128
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