The scholar-saint at work.
The lion and cardinal's hat allow
us to identify the figure as St Jerome (382-405). These attributes
can also be seen in Dürer's St
Jerome seated near a pollard Willow. The skull and the crucifix
are reminders of death, and the Christian means of salvation and
everlasting life.
Dürer frames his composition, with the foreground step and
pier on the left supporting a carved beam. The central window wall
allows magical patterns of light to play on the window recesses,
floor and ceiling. Dürer took the idea of depicting a saint
in a sunny spacious study from Italian artists. The atmosphere
recalls the painting St Augustine in his Study (Venice,
Scuola di S Giorgio degli Schiavoni), which Carpaccio had just
finished when Dürer visited Venice (for the second time) in
1504-7. A preparatory drawing for Carpaccio's painting is in The
British Museum.
There is a very wide
range of tone in the print. With this Dürer
has created the illusion of light, space and texture that is more
like a Renaissance painting, showing the outstanding skill that
he brought to the engraving technique in his later years.
Dürer's monogram and the date of
the engraving can be seen on a plaque on the floor.
Bequeathed by Felix Slade.
Further Reading/Sources:
PD 1868-8-22-185 (Bartsch 60, Dodgson 74) Department of Prints and Drawings
G.
Bartrum, German Renaissance prints, 1490-1550, exh.
cat. (London, The British Museum Press, 1995), p. 48, no. 34
E. Panofsky, The
life and art of Albrecht Dürer (Princeton
University Press, 1945, 1971), pp. 154-6
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