Christ Among the Doctors (Dürer)

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Christ among the Doctors
ArtistAlbrecht Dürer
Year1506
Typepainting
Mediumoil on poplar panel
MovementGerman Renaissance
SubjectFinding in the Temple
Dimensions65 cm × 80 cm (26 in × 31 in)
LocationMuseo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid (formerly Castagnola, Lugano)
Accession134 (1934.38)

Christ among the Doctors is an oil painting by Albrecht Dürer, dating to 1506, now in the Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madridi, Spain. The work belongs to the time of Dürer's second sojourn in Italy, and was according to its inscription executed incidentally in five days while he was working on the Feast of the Rosary altarpiece in Venice. The work was influenced by Leonardo da Vinci and possibly based on the most probably earlier painting by Cima da Conegliano on the same theme.[1]

Conception[edit]

Dürer and workshop, Christ among the Doctors from the Seven Sorrows Polyptych, 1494–1497, Gemäldegalerie Dresden
Christ among the Doctors from the Life of the Virgin, 1503/1504, woodcut print, 29.8 × 20.9 cm

The topic of the panel painting is the Finding in the Temple episode from Jesus' childhood, found in the Gospel of Luke (2:41–52). On an annual pilgrimage of the holy family to Jerusalem for Passover the twelve-year old child got lost and found again after three days in a temple debating with scholars executing His Father's business.

The subject had already been treated by Dürer in a panel of the Seven Sorrows Polyptych (1494–1497) executed by his workshop, and abput ten years later in a woodcut of the Life of the Virgin series. However, in this work the German artist adopted a dense composition of half-figures, which was introduced by Andrea Mantegna in his The Presentation at the Temple (c. 1454, Berlin) and present in all Northern Italian schools including Venice.[2] Though Dürer emphasised the focus on faces and hands (and books) even more.[3]

Preparatory drawings[edit]

Not until his second journey to Italy Dürer made detailed studies after living models before he worked out a final composition for paintings and engravings alike.[4] [5] The first preparatory drawings originate in Venice, all in the same technique: dark ink drawn with a brush, highlighted with white tempera, on large sheets of Venetian blue dyed paper carta azzurra. The blue color serves as a middle tone, a method he formerly applied in the Green Passion of 1504, and in drawings where he washed the background around the figures to obtain the same effect.[6] Four preparatory drawings for the painting have survived, one of the infant's head (originally with the head of the lute playing angel for the Rosary panel on one sheet now cut) and a hand holding a book (both in the Albertina, Wien), a study of the hands counting of arguments, and a further drawing with two pairs of hands holding a book, of which only one Dürer finally incorporated into the final picture (both in the Germanische Nationalmuseum, Nuremberg).[7][8][9]

The manner of painting[edit]

The panel of Jesus among the Doctors has an usual underdrawing grounded with egg-tempera, but covered by just a tenuious layer of oil paint.[11] In fact, it is made "in an almost impromptu fashion, a thin coat of color being applied in broad and fluid strokes utterly different from Dürer's normally meticulous brushwork," Erwin Panofsky described it.[12] Christof Metzger, chief curator of the Graphic Collection at the Albertina in Vienna, stated that the panel wasn't even finished. Both pairs of hands in the center show still the outlines and hatches of the underdrawing and are hardly colored at all. The two heads in the background, the one in the upper right corner and the one who is looking out of the picture appear unfinished.[13] Copies of the panel in Germany from around 1600 serve as evidence that the image was known north of the Alps, so that Dürer must have brought the painting back with him to Nuremberg. Metzger goes even further in bringing in Hans Baldung Grien, who was an apprentice at the time Dürer came back from Venice. On stylistical grounds Metzger proposes, that Baldung finished the painting, specifically the heads in the background including the one with the black hat looking into a book. Already in 1926 Baldass noticed that the panel was enlarged by a lath patched onto the upper edge, so the heads at the must have been later additions. But this was believed to be an esthetic decision of the Baroque era or even later.[14]

The color palette is rather narrow, essentially two green tones for the cloaks of Jesus and two of the scholars, and a range of brown tones, from the darkened faces in the shadowy back, the book covers and the red cloak of the doctor on the right, the yellowish cap of the figure on the left, to the lighter skin colors and the broken white tones of hair, paper, the chemise poking out at the wrist on the lower left corner and of the doctor in profile, whose cap on the head is the largest bright part of the composition. The color range is expressively restrained compared to his interpretation on the altar-piece of the Seven Sorrows and the rich color conception of Italian Renaissance art."[15]

"Made in five days"[edit]

As usual Dürer signed his work with his monogram and a date, displayed on an object within the scenery, like a little plaque (cartellino) or a piece of paper, a veristic device to invite the beholder into the picture space and hence into the depicted drama, instead of just signing an essentially two-dimensional composition of brush strokes on the surface of a piece of wood. The inscription in Jesus among the Doctors is written on a bookmarker that sticks out of the folio at the bottom of the picture on the left. It reads: 1506/A. D./Opus quinque dierum, "made in five days". He produced the picture in this indeed rather short time to finish an oil painting, so that it was worth the inscription, probably due to the fact, that he prominently had to work on the Feast of the Rosary, commissioned by the German community in Venice residing at the Fondaco dei Tedeschi for their church (which brought him immidiate fame that also radiated back to Nuremberg). And with the Virgin with the Siskin and several commissioned portraits there was plenty of work to be done. But the inscription cannot have taken into account the time of the conception, not the preparatory studies nor the underdrawing.[16] The "five days" may be also an ironic allusion to the five month he needed to finish the Rosary altarpiece.[17]

Imagery[edit]

The characters occupy the whole panel submerged in a dark background intensifying the tense atmosphere. Especially when compared to his former interpretations of the scene with their spacious compositions and traditional conception, the almost "nightmarish" (Panofsky) staging becomes evident. Here, the young Jesus is besieged by six philosophers surrounding him, arranged on at least four different planes, each with different skin texture, pose and expression, like character studies. They stand in stark contrast to the entirely soft and restraint appearance of the innocent child. Still, it stands steadfast in the central axis of the picture contemplating his arguments and counting them off on his fingers, while the doctors keep to the books in their hands ready to cite from them.

The man on the lower left has a cartouche on his beret, a customary depiction of the Pharisees.[18] The oldest of the philosophers on the right next to Jesus refutes his thoughts even with his imposing hands that interrupt the child's argumentative gesture. These two pairs of hands form a kind of ornament in the center of the picture, summorizing the panel's theme in an abstract way.[19] The gesturing hands were a characteristic Italian motif for the representation of scholars and teachers.[20] The head of the "wicked old scholar" shown in profile "can hardly be imagined without some knowledge" of the caricature drawings by Leonardo da Vinci, and with the contrasting depiction of "extreme beauty and extreme ugliness" Dürer may as well has been following Leonardo's instruction in his Trattato della Pintura how to depict a conversation.[21] In fact, although Leonardo was in Milan at the time, Dürer went to Florence for a short time and probably visited Leonardo's workshop, where his apprentices were still busy, so he could have seen into his work.[22] Nevertheless, in this panel Dürer displayed the believe in the morally good that is expressed in Italian art pictorially through ideal beauty. This is hardly found in the works of his Northern Renaissance contemporaries, and Dürer himself adepted some crucial ideas of the Italian Renaissance esthetic but did not orient his work wholeheartedly towards it either. He came to understand art as a science, but his Jesus among the Doctors has no part in this, and is often seen as "Gothic" still.[23]

The tradition of the composition[edit]

Mantegna and Bellini[edit]

The conception of a composition with several half-figures (maximal height) in a neutral dark space was introduced by Andrea Mantegna, but may be traced back to reliefs by Donatello.[24] The theme is only displayed by facial expression, gesture and the spacial relation between the figures. Mantegna probably painted The Presentation at the Temple around 1455, when he got married to the sister of Giovanni Bellini, or on the occasion of the birth of their first child. To the scene's protagonists, Mary, the Infant Jesus, Joseph (slightly subordinated in the center) and Simeon, who is about to recognise the Messiah, two figures were added, who are sometimes considered to be portraits of Mantegna himself and his wife (since the woman is to young to be the 84-year old Hannah of the story, who propagates the news). Mantegna's brother-in-law painted decades later an expanded version of the Presentation at the Temple traced from the original, which was often considered similarly a Bellini family portrait (including Mantegna).

Mantegna died in Mantua in 1506, and there are no sources that would confirm Dürer ever met him personally, but through Bellini he learned about his work. In 1494 Dürer copied at least two engravings by Mantegna, Battle of the Sea Gods and Bacchanal with Silenus.[25]

Dürer became acquainted with Bellini on his first stay in Venice in the mid-1490s. They very much respected each other. Bellini asked Dürer to paint a piece for him, and it was considered that Dürer maybe gave the Christ among the Doctors to him.[26] Dürer wrote to his humanist friend Willibald Pirckheimer in Nuremberg that Bellini was "old, but that he was still the best" (""). At the time Dürer arrived in Venice again in the summer of 1505, Bellini's had just been erected He paid homage to him by incorporating an original figure of a stand-angel by Bellini into the Feast of the Rosary

The half-figure on the far right side is said to be perhaps a citation of Giovanni Bellini, but it is more likely that the figure was copied from a painting by Mantegna. In his Adoration of the Magi from around 1500, conceived too as a picture-filling sacra conversazione, the figure is also placed in the lower right corner. Dürer used this figure several times, in the Feast of the Rosary he was also working on at the time, the head appears somewhat hidden at the far left side of the panel.

Both Presentation panels of Mantegna and Bellini have all personage and the beholder on equal height, whereas Dürer seems to have tilted the ground plane resulting in a perspectival view from slightly above to gain depth of space and rectify the overcrowded scene. But the composition is "conceived flatly, and the spatial relations between the figures are so much neglected that we must interpret this lack of three-dimensionality as intentional."[27] Nevertheless he emphasised the drama quite contrary to the prefered harmony of Venetian art.[28]

Bernardino Luini and Cima daConegliano[edit]

Cima da Conegliano, Christ among the Scholars, c. 1504, tempera on panel, 54.5 x 84.4 cm, National Museum in Warsaw

The panel of Christ among the Doctors by Cima da Conegliano is assessed to have preceded Dürer's painting about a year or two. Cima followed the local tradition established by Mantegna and Bellini. About thirty copies and variations of their composition alone are known.[29] And the conception with half-figures with a neutral background lend itself to other biblical episodes and sacred conversations produced in Northern Italy.

Cima took the theme out of its narrative context and created an autonomous symbolic composition. He left Mary and Joseph out of the picture and concentrated the image on the theological debate, emphasised by the traditional motif of hands enumarating points on the fingers (computus digitalis). The gesture is depicted slightly off center to the right, the right hand reaching for the left, just like in the Dürer painting. But here it forms a diagonal with Christ's head, which reruns in parallels elegantly through the whole composition. The overriding theme of divine knowledge through Christ as Alpha and Omega can be read from left to right (Old versus New Testament). And the personage, whose diversity is illustrated by their clothes, form a half-circle around the Christ Child, already generating a deeper space than the panels by Mantegna and Bellini. It seems more likely that Dürer developed his composition from Cima's, than the other way around. Cima's "classical composition could not have been produced as an echo of Dürer's "Gothic" unrest."[30]

Bernardino Luini, Christ among the Doctors, c.1515–30, National Gallery, London

The theme of Jesus among the Doctors became popular in Italy. In 1504 Isabella d'Este commissioned Leonardo to paint the Infant Jesus, but nothing came of that. The later painting by Bernardino Luini was assumed to have been inspired by or even copied from an assumed lost composition by Leonardo. But this dependancy is rejected and the lost work by Leonardo dismissed, despite some resemblance particularly of the young Jesus with Leonardo's style.[31] Apart from that, Luni's work appears more like a devotional image in a traditional way. Christ stands in the foreground and faces the beholder and adresses him, leaving the doctors behind him merely as staffage, the conflict muted.[32]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ David Alan Brown; Sylvia Ferino-Pagden (2006). Bellini, Giorgione, Tizian and the Renaissance of Venetian Painting. National Gallery of Art, Washington, and Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien. Princeton, NJ: Yale University Press. pp. 112–115. ISBN 978-0-300-11677-9.
  2. ^ Heinrich Wölfflin (1905). Die Kunst Albrecht Dürers. Munich: F. Bruckmann. p. 133.
  3. ^ Erwin Panofsky (1955) [1945]. The Life and Art of Albrecht Dürer (PDF) (1971 ed.). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. p. 114. ISBN 0-691-00303-3.
  4. ^ Panofsky, p. 118.
  5. ^ Albrecht Dürer 1471–1971 (Exhibition held at the Germanische NationalmuseumNürnberg) (in German). Munich: Prestel. 1971. p. 113. ISBN 3791300040.
  6. ^ Panofsky, p. 118.
  7. ^ Fedja Anzelewsky (1980). "Italien 1505–1507". Dürer – Werk und Wirkung (in German). Stuttgart: Electa/Klett-Cotta. pp. 132–138. ISBN 3-88448-007-3.
  8. ^ Rainer Schoch (1986). "Catalogue Nr. 124: Albrecht Dürer, The Hands of the Twelve-Year-Old Child". Gothic and Renaissance Art in Nuremberg (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, and Germanisches Nationalmuseum Nuremberg. New York and Munich: Metropolitan Museum of Art and Prestel. pp. 297f. ISBN 3-88448-007-3.
  9. ^ Metzger, p. 262.
  10. ^ For a proper (not downloadable) reproduction see online catalog Hz5481 of the Germanische Nationalmuseum.
  11. ^ Moritz Thausing (1882). Albrecht Dürer. London: J. Murray. p. 350.
  12. ^ Panofsky, p. 114.
  13. ^ Christof Metzger (2019). "Jesus unter den Schriftgelehrten". In Christof Metzger (ed.). Albrecht Dürer (in German). Vienna and Munich: Albertina and Prestel. pp. 252–262. ISBN 978-3-7913-5930-4. (An English edition was published.)
  14. ^ Bialostocki, p. 18, citing Ludwig Baldass (1926), "Betrachtungen zum Werke des Hieronymus Bosch", Jahrbuch der Kunsthist. Sammlungen (in German), Vienna, p. 120{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link).
  15. ^ Jan Bialostocki (1959). ""Opus Quinque Dierum": Dürer's 'Christ among the Doctors' and Its Sources". Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes. 22 (1/2). London: The Warburg Institute: 17–34: 18f. Retrieved 2024-05-10.
  16. ^ Panofsky, p. 114.
  17. ^ Metzger, p. 256.
  18. ^ Katie Turner (2015), "'The Shoe is the Sign!' Costuming Brian and Dressing the First Century.", in Joan E. Taylor (ed.), Jesus and Brian, London: T&T Clark, pp. 221–237 and Joshua Schwartz (2021), "Clothes Make the Jew: Was There Distinctive Jewish Dress in the Greco-Roman Period?", in Alicia J. Batten; K. Olson (eds.), Dress in Mediterranean Antiquity, London: T&T Clark, pp. 247–256.
  19. ^ New York/Nuremberg, p. 298.
  20. ^ Panofsky, p. 114.
  21. ^ Panofsky, p. 115.
  22. ^ Anzelewsky, p. 136, 138.
  23. ^ Bialostocki, p. 19.
  24. ^ Neville Rowley (2019), "Als Bellini Mantegna abpauste. Zwei Versionen der Darbringung im Tempel", in Caroline Campbell; Dagmar Korbacher; Neville Rowley; Sarah Vowles (eds.), Mantegna & Bellini. Meister der Renaissance (in German), London, Berlin, München: National Gallery of Art, Gemäldegalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Hirmer, pp. 140–147 (An English editon was published.) A variation of the text in German and English was published in the museum's online catalogue.
  25. ^ Panofsky, pp. 31f, who also deduces a third but lost copy from motifs in Dürer's work.
  26. ^ Bialostocki, p. 30.
  27. ^ Bialostocki, p. 17–19.
  28. ^ Bialostocki, p. 19.
  29. ^ Brown, Ferino-Pagden, p. 112 (cites Ringbom 1965).
  30. ^ Bialostocki, p. 30.
  31. ^ Panofsky, p.115; Brown, Ferino-Pagden, p. 112 (cites Peter Humfrey 1983).
  32. ^ Bialostocki, p. 31.

Sources[edit]

Moritz Thausing (1882). Albrecht Dürer. London: J. Murray. p. 350.

Weblinks[edit]

Further reading[edit]

  • Martina Sauer (2021), Affordance as a Method in Visual Cultural Studies Based on Theory and Tools of Vitality Semiotics. A historiographic and comparative study of Formal Aesthetics, Iconology, and Affordance using the example of Albrecht Dürer's Christ Among the Doctors from 1506, New York and São Paulo: Art Style Art & Culture international Magazine 7, pp. 11–37.