St Jerome in His Cell
Print
1511 (wood-cutting)
1511 (wood-cutting)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Woodcut print depicting the Church Father St Jerome writing in his monastic cell. St Jerome was a theologian and ascetic who made a Latin translation of the bible. His figure fills the centre of the cell and he is bent intently over his work at a small writing desk. A crucifix is attached to the desk facing him. The cell is intimate and cluttered. There are books, writing materials, an hourglass and objects used for devotion and penitence. A chest, cushion and curtain introduce an element of comfort. A lion, often associated with the saint, fills the bottom left hand corner of the composition.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | St Jerome in His Cell (popular title) |
Materials and techniques | Woodcut on paper |
Brief description | Saint Jerome in his cell, woodcut by Albrecht Dürer, Germany, 1511 |
Physical description | Woodcut print depicting the Church Father St Jerome writing in his monastic cell. St Jerome was a theologian and ascetic who made a Latin translation of the bible. His figure fills the centre of the cell and he is bent intently over his work at a small writing desk. A crucifix is attached to the desk facing him. The cell is intimate and cluttered. There are books, writing materials, an hourglass and objects used for devotion and penitence. A chest, cushion and curtain introduce an element of comfort. A lion, often associated with the saint, fills the bottom left hand corner of the composition. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions |
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Credit line | Bequeathed by Miss Alice Carthew |
Object history | This is one of the six single leaf woodcuts that Dürer issued in 1511. It is classed as one of a group of prints that Dürer referred to as 'Schlechtes Holzwerk' (modest woodcuts). The print was part of a large bequest made to the Museum in 1940 Historical significance: Dürer's detailed compositions in woodcut pushed the medium to new heights, demonstrating its expressive and narrative potential. Woodcuts form a significant part of Dürer's output, outnumbering paintings and intaglio prints and show the artist at his most innovative. He moved away from the two dimensional quality of earlier woodcuts, using hatching and undulating parallel lines to create form and dramatic contrasts of light and shade. It is thought that Dürer did not cut the wood blocks himself, but followed the practice of the day by using professional form-cutters (formschneider). Form-cutters are recorded in Dürer's home city of Nuremburg as early as 1397. With the advent of moveable type the form-cutter's work became increaingly to cut designs and images for book illustration and single leaf prints. In this print the chiaroscuro effects are enhanced by extensive use of cross-hatching, creating a mesh of lines that would have required great skill to cut on the block. |
Historical context | Dürer returned to the subject of St Jerome many times in paintings, drawings, engravings and woodcuts - an indication of the popularity of the saint. |
Subjects depicted | |
Bibliographic reference | Walter L.Strauss. Albrecht Dürer Woodcuts and Woodblocks. Abaris books, New York, 1980. p 458 |
Other number | B.114 - Le Peintre-Graveur |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.738-1940 |
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Record created | March 17, 2006 |
Record URL |
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