Albrecht Dürer,
Hercules, a woodblock
and woodcut
Germany, signed, AD
1496-97
Hercules and three other figures in a
landscape
The scroll at the top of this
woodcut
identifies the subject as the Greek hero Herakles (Latin:
Hercules). A pagan subject is rare in Dürer's work, so it
was probably suggested by one of his humanist friends. These
scholars, who read ancient Latin and Greek texts, may have enjoyed
choosing a novel subject that baffled the wider
public.
The print is one of
seven single-sheet woodcuts produced by Dürer after he returned
from his first visit to Italy in 1496. These influential prints
liberated the woodcut from service to book publishers. The lines in
Dürer's woodcuts are no longer restricted to contours, but
suggest light and shadow, and include rich descriptive detail. In
other words, he has transferred to woodcut the effects of tone and
texture achieved by Schongauer in
engraving
(here, compare Schongauer's drapery and sky).
The technical challenge of
cutting a block to reproduce these qualities was considerable. The
woodblock for this print survives. It shows that lines were cut
sharply down on either side so that they would print crisply and
without smudging. Isolated lines, like the stray hairs of the two
women, were particularly liable to damage. The pearwood used for
this block was popular among blockcutters, because it has close
grain and does not split easily.
E. Panofsky, The life and art of Albrecht D (Princeton University Press, 1945, 1971)
A. Griffiths, Prints and printmaking: an int, 2nd edition (London, The British Museum Press, 1996)
G. Bartrum, German Renaissance prints, 149, exh. cat. (London, The British Museum Press, 1995)
D. Landau and P. Parshall, The Renaissance print 1470-155 (New Haven and London, Yale University Press, 1994)