The saint as a desert hermit.
Dürer only made three drypoints in his career, which probably
all date from 1512. This is probably the most successful. Here,
the rich black tone of the shadows indicates that it is an early
impression, printed before the plate had worn down. The limited
number of good prints that can be pulled from a drypoint plate
may explain why Dürer abandoned the technique. St
Jerome is usually depicted in two ways: as a scholar in his
study, or as a penitent sinner, beating his chest with a rock
to deaden his flesh to sin. Dürer has combined these traditions,
and moved the scholar in his desk into a landscape. This setting
for St Jerome was popular in Venice, where Dürer had stayed
twice. The pool and rocky foreground, and the view into the distance
(glimpsed to the left of the crucifix) are characteristic of the
Venetian paintings, such as versions by Giovanni Bellini in the
National Galleries of London and Washington.
St Jerome (382-405) was responsible for translating the Bible into
the Latin 'Vulgate' version, the Bible of the Western Church through
the Middle Ages and still the official Bible of the Roman Catholic
Church. The Vulgate was over 1,000 years old by 1500. The printing
of translations from the original Greek became a topic of bitter
public debate. Martin Luther published a version of the New Testament
in German in 1522; William Tyndale produced an English version in
1526, a crime for which he was burnt at the stake in 1536.
Further Reading/Sources:
PD 1851-12-13-149 Department of Prints and Drawings
G. Bartrum, German Renaissance prints, 1490-1550, exh.
cat. (London, The British Museum Press, 1995), p. 46, no. 31
E. Panofsky, The life and art of Albrecht
Dürer (Princeton
University Press, 1945, 1971), pp. 148-49
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