Adoration of the Magi.
Dürer.
It was in the year 1504 that Dürer finished the first great picture, which,
from its excellent state of preservation, must have been entirely executed with
the greatest care by his own hand, even to the most minute detail. This picture
is the Adoration of the Magi, now in the Tribune of the Uffizi at
Florence. Mary sits on the left, looking like the happiest of German mothers,
with the enchantingly naïve Infant on her knees; the three Wise Men from the
East, in magnificent dresses glittering with gold, approach, deeply moved, and
with various emotions depicted on their countenances, while the whole creation
around seems to share their joyous greeting,cheap oil paintings for sale, even to the flowers and herbs, and
to the great stag-beetle and two white butterflies, which are introduced after
the manner of Wolgemut. The sunny green on copse and mountain throws up the
group better than the conventional nimbus could have done. The fair-haired
Virgin, draped entirely in blue with a white veil, recalls vividly the same
figure in the Paumgärtner altarpiece. Aërial and linear perspective are still
imperfect, but the technical treatment of the figures is as finished as in
Dürer's best pictures of the later period. The outlines are sharp, the colours very liquid, laid on without doubt in
tempera, and covered with oil glazes; the whole tone exceedingly fresh,abstract oil paintings, clear,
and brilliant. If it was Barbari's fine work which incited Dürer to this
delicate and careful method of execution, he has certainly far surpassed the
Venetian, not only in form and ideas, but also in the solidity of his technique.
This technique is undoubtedly of Northern origin, as is also the harmony of
colour, which Dürer here realizes, and does not soon again abandon. It must not
be forgotten, however, that the difference between this technique and that
practised by Giovanni Bellini is one of degree and not of principle; judging at
least by the unfinished painting of Giovanni's in the Uffizi, in which the
design is sketched either with the pencil or brush, and the colours then laid on
in tempera, and afterwards repeatedly covered with oil glazes. Dürer appears to
have owed the opportunity of producing this his first masterpiece in painting to
a commission from the Elector Frederick of Saxony. Christian II. presented it to
the Emperor Rudolph II. in 1603, and in the last century it was sent from the
imperial gallery, in exchange for the Presentation in the Temple, by Fra
Bartolomeo, to Florence, where it now shines as a gem of German art amongst the
renowned pictures in the Tribune of the Uffizi. modern abstract art oil paintingDürer.
The Life and Works of Albert Dürer, translated from the German and
edited by Fred. A. Eaton (London, 1882).
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