Albert Dürer. T. Sturge Moore

Albert Dürer - T. Sturge Moore


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       Apollo and Diana, Metal Engraving

       Water-colour drawing of a Hare

       Pilate Washing his Hands. Metal Engraving

       Agnes Frey

       "Mein Angnes"

       Wilibald Pirkheimer

       Hans Burgkmair

       Adoration of the Trinity

       St. Christopher

       Assumption of the Magdalen

       Dürer's Mother

       Maximilian

       Frederick the Wise

       Silver-point Portrait

       Erasmus

       Drawing of a Lion

       Lucas van der Leyden

       Peter and John at the Beautiful Gate. Metal Engraving

       St. George and St. Eustache

       Martyrdom of Ten Thousand Saints

       Road to Calvary

       Portrait of Dürer

       Portrait of Dürer

       Albert Dürer the Elder

       Gswolt Krel

       Portrait at Hampton Court

       Portrait of a Lady

       Michel Wolgemuth

       Hans Imhof

       "Jakob Muffel"

       Study of a Hound

       Memento Mei

       Silver-point Portrait

       Portrait in Black Chalk

       Cherub for a Crucifixion

       Apollo and Diana

       An Old Castle

       Melancholia

       Detail from "The Agony in the Garden"

       Angel with Sudarium

       The Small Horse

       The Great Fortune, or Nemesis

       Silver-point Drawing

       St. Michael and the Dragon

       Detail from "The Meeting at the Golden Gate"

       Detail from "The Nativity"

       Dürer's Armorial Bearings

       Christ haled before Annas

       The Last Supper

       Saint Antony, Metal Engraving

       "In the Eighteenth Year"

       "Una Vilana Wendisch"

       Charcoal Drawing

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      Ich hab vernomen wie der siben weysen aus kriechenland ainer gelert hab das dymass in allen dingen sitlichen und naturlichen das pest sey.

      DÜRER, British Museum MS., vol. iv., 82a.

      I have heard how one of the Seven Sages of Greece taught that measure is in all things, physical and moral, best.

      La souveraine habileté consiste à bien connaitre le prix des choses. LA ROCHEFOUCAULD, III. 252.

      Sovereign skill consists in thoroughly understanding the value of things.

      The attempt that the last quarter century has witnessed, to introduce the methods of science into the criticism of works of art, has tended, it seems to me, to put the question of their value into the background. The easily scandalous inquiries, "Who?" "When?" "Where?" have assumed an impertinent predominance. When I hear people very decidedly asserting that such a picture was painted by such an one, not generally supposed to be the author, at such a time, &c. &c., I often feel uneasy in the same way as one does on being addressed in a loud voice in a church or a picture gallery, where other persons are absorbed in an acknowledged and respected contemplation or study. I feel inclined to blush and whisper, for fear of being supposed to know the speaker too well. It is an awkward moment with me, for I am in fact very good friends with many such persons. "Sovereign skill consists in thoroughly understanding the value of things"--not their commercial value only, though that is sovereign skill on the Exchange, but their value for those whose chief riches are within them. The value of works of art is an intimate experience, and cannot be estimated by the methods of exact science as the weight of a planet can. There are and have been forgeries that are more beautiful, therefore more valuable, than genuine specimens of the class of work which they figure as. I feel that the specialist, with his special measure and point of view, often endangers the fair name and good repute of the real estimate; and that nothing but the dominion and diffusion of general ideas can defend us against the specialist and keep the specialist from being carried away by bad habits resulting from his devotion to a single inquiry.

      There was one general idea, of the greatest importance in determining the true value of things, which preoccupied Dürer's mind and haunted his imagination: the idea of proportion. I propose therefore to attempt to make clear to myself and my readers what the idea of proportion really implies, and of what service a sense for proportion really is; secondly, to determine the special use of the term in relation to the appreciation of works of art; thirdly, in relation to their internal structure;--before proceeding to the special studies of Dürer as a man and an artist.

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      I conceive the human reason to be the antagonist of all known forces other than itself, and that therefore its most essential character is the hope and desire to control and transform the universe; or, failing that, to annihilate, if not the universe, at least itself and the consciousness of a monster fact which it entirely condemns. In this conception I believe myself to be at one with those by whom men have been most influenced, and who, with or without confidence in the support of unknown powers, have set themselves deliberately against the face of things to die or conquer. This being so, and man individually weak, it has been the avowed object of great characters--carrying with them the instinctive consent of nations--to establish current values for all things, according as their imagination could turn them to account as effective aids of reason: that is, as they could be made to advance her apparent empire over other elemental forces, such as motion, physical life, &c. This evaluation, in so far as it is constant, results in what we call civilisation, and is the only bond of society. With difficulty is the value of new acquisitions recognised even in the realm of science, until the imagination can place them in such a light as shall make them appear to advance reason's ends, which accounts for the reluctance


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