Albrecht Duerer's Afterlife

LUND HUMPHRIES PUBLISHERS LTDISBN: 9781848224933

Price:
Sale price$123.00
Stock:
In stock, 10 units

By Jeffrey Chipps Smith
Imprint: LUND HUMPHRIES PUBLISHERS LTD
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
250 x 190 mm
Weight:
600 g
Pages:
160

Description

Jeffrey Chipps Smith is Professor and Kay Fortson Chair in European Art at the Department of Art and Art History, University of Texas. He is the author of numerous books, the most recent of which is Kunstkammer: Early Modern Art and Curiosity Cabinets in the Holy Roman Empire.


Preface; 1 Self-Fashioning and Posthumous Futures; 2 The Duerer Renaissance; 3 The Authority and Appeal of Duerers Prints; 4 The Written Story of Albrecht Duerer; 5 Duerer and the German Romantics; 6 Celebrating Duerer; 7 Duerers Institutional Canonization; 8 The Popularization of Duerer; 9 Whose Duerer?; 10 Duerer Unleashed; Select Bibliography; Photo Captions; Index


Reviews


Smith provides a fantastically compact and compelling discussion of Dürers many afterlives, unparalleled in scope and completely up to date. It will be essential reading for anyone interested in art history as we approach the 500th anniversary of Dürers death in 2028, and as new interpretations of the artist and his work resonate with the present. The saga will indeed continue, but Smiths masterful book inspiringly guides us to a greater degree of reflection on how and why the memory of Dürer has been shaped in the way it has, from his own time to the Nazis and his hometown Nuremberg today.



Ulinka Rublack, author of Dürer´s Lost Masterpiece, Professor of History at Cambridge University





Albrecht Dürers work and life are known to almost everyone who is even slightly interested in art history. Picking up from Matthias Mende’s groundbreaking work on the afterlife of this exceptional artist, Jeffrey Chipps Smith demonstrates convincingly – with a wealth of surprising details and connections – how much our image of Dürer today depends on the reception of past centuries. Only in this way do we come closer to the "true" Dürer. – Thomas Schauerte, Museen der Stadt Aschaffenburg



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