Albrecht Dürer:
Picture "Young Hare" (1502), golden framed version
Proportional view
Picture "Young Hare" (1502), golden framed version
Albrecht Dürer:
Picture "Young Hare" (1502), golden framed version

Quick info

ars mundi Exclusive Edition | limited, 980 copies | numbered | certificate | reproduction, Giclée print on canvas | on stretcher frame | framed | size approx. 66 x 61 cm (h/w)

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Product no. IN-898911

Delivery time: Immediately deliverable

Frame variant
Picture "Young Hare" (1502), golden framed version
Albrecht Dürer: Picture "Young Hare" (1502), golden frame...

Detailed description

Picture "Young Hare" (1502), golden framed version

Original: Watercolours, heightened with opaque colours, 25.1 x 22.6 cm, 2073 D 49 Vienna, Graphische Sammlung Albertina.

High-quality Fine Art Giclée museum edition printed directly on artist's cotton canvas and stretched on a stretcher frame. Limited edition of 980 copies. Numbered on the back with certificate. Framed in a golden solid wood frame. Size framed approx. 66 x 61 cm (h/w). arsmundi Exclusive Edition.

Hersteller: ars mundi Edition Max Büchner GmbH, Bödekerstraße 13, 30161 Hannover, Deutschland E-Mail: info@arsmundi.de

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Portrait of the artist Albrecht Dürer

About Albrecht Dürer

1471-1528

German painter, copperplate engraver and woodcut draughtsman. He is one of the most important and versatile artists of the period of transition from the late Middle Ages to the Renaissance in Germany.

At first, he learned goldsmithing but at the age of fifteen, he already started as an apprentice to a painter. Later he followed the German custom of taking Wanderjahre (gap years), and when he returned home he developed the greatest versatility in painting using the techniques known at the time.

His animal drawings, that are produced in such accuracy of observation and execution of drawing, point to the view of nature, undistorted by mythology and superstition, that became so characteristic of the Renaissance. The statement formulated by Galileo more than a century later already applied to Dürer at his time: "Nature is written in that great book whichever is before our eyes but we cannot understand it if we do not first learn the language and grasp the symbols in which it is written."

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