When people think about the renaissance, I think they were usually Italian or Italian, Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo Bonarroti and Raphael Sancio. Training, study, and work Although these artists are in Southern Europe, of course, they are in Scandinavian countries like Germany. How Germans do, how this new way of thinking, and how new ways of using technology and tools are spreading in Germany and other countries. Many believe that Albrecht Dürer is a major catalyst to the North Renaissance and one of the most important contributors.
Most of the large companies completed in the Renaissance period were from Italians, but other European countries also experienced the same "regeneration". One of the greatest artists of the northern Renaissance was the German artist Albrecht Durer. Durer is himself in the Renaissance, as his work attracts people in a new way. He was born in 1471 and lived until 1528. In this era, new types of patrons have evolved. They are not aristocrats, middle classes and bourgeoisie, they are enthusiastic about purchasing photos with newly developed woodcut print media. The new century also attracted interests in humanism and science, as well as books, and many of which are depicted in woodcut prints.
Artist and cumulative humanist Albrecht Durer is one of the most important figures in European art history other than Renaissance Italy (Gowing 195). Drawing the spirit of doubt into the Renaissance, Durer investigated his own situation by capturing the essence of his role as an artist and creator, as he himself is reflected in self-portrait of a fur robe I am convinced that I have to explore. With this portrait, the highly self-conscious attitude towards Durer's artistic position more clearly represents a higher mission to his art than any other painting. "Not as an artist, not as an artist, it is not as an origin of art itself nor as a sublime mission, he does not care much about myself as a person," he thinks. (Strieder 13)
Albrecht Durer (1471 - 1528) is a German painter, printmaker and theorist from Nuremberg. His still famous works include Revelation Woodcut, Knight, Death and Devil (1513), St. Jerome (1514) and Melancolia I (1514). Explain the theme. His watercolors made him one of the earliest landscape painters in Europe, and his ambitious woodblock print revolutionized the possibilities of this medium. Through the knowledge of Italian artists and German humanist, Durer introduced a classic theme to Northern Art and ensured his reputation as one of the most important figures of the Northern Renaissance. His theoretical paper contains mathematical principles, perspectives, and ideal ratios, reinforcing this.