User:Lithoderm/The Knight, Death, and the Devil
Appearance
The Knight, Death, and the Devil | |
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German: Ritter, Tod und Teufel | |
Artist | Albrecht Dürer |
Year | 1513 |
Type | Copper Engraving |
Dimensions | 24.6 cm × 19 cm (9.7 in × 7.5 in) |
Location | Multiple museum collections |
The Knight, Death, and the Devil (German: Ritter, Tod, und Teufel[1]) is a copper engraving from 1513 and one of the three master prints of Albrecht Dürer.
Gallery
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Dürer referred to the work as "Reuter", meaning simply "Rider"
Notes to self
[edit]- At least three theories of what the "s" before the date means:
- Sanguine, as opposed to Melancholia
- An alternate form of AD- year of grace
- sculpet, as in "I made this"
- Sparnecker/Sickingen- see here:[1]
- Has been interpreted along two lines ever since its inception:
- The knight is in league with the devil; Franz von Sickingen (Sparnecker?)
- The Christian knight, per Erasmus; this is the more influential view...
- Legacy: the Nazis
- Is the painting of Adolf Hitler as the flag bearer PD?[2]
- Upload the version from the Met
- Find a source that discusses the armor in detail: the helm he wears is a visored sallet