Albrecht Dürer, The
Rhinoceros, a drawing and
woodcut
Germany, AD 1515
This celebrated
woodcut
records the arrival in Lisbon of an Indian rhinoceros on 20 May
1515. The ruler of Gujarat, Sultan Muzafar II (1511-26) had
presented it to Alfonso d'Albuquerque, the governor of
Portuguese India. Albuquerque passed the gift on to Dom Manuel I,
the king of Portugal. The rhinoceros travelled in a ship full of
spices. On its arrival in Lisbon, Dom Manuel arranged for the
rhinoceros to fight one of his elephants (according to Pliny the
Elder's Historia
Naturalis ('Natural History')
(AD 77), the elephant and rhinoceros are bitter enemies). The
elephant apparently turned and
fled.
A description of the
rhinoceros soon reached Nuremberg, presumably with sketches, from
which Dürer prepared this drawing and
woodcut.
No rhinoceros had
been seen in Europe for over 1000 years, so Dürer had to work
solely from these reports. He has covered the creature's
legs with scales and the body with hard, patterned plates. Perhaps
these features interpret lost sketches, or even the text, which
states, '[The rhinoceros] has the colour of a speckled
tortoise and it is covered with thick
scales'.
So
convincing was Dürer's fanciful creation that for the next
300 years European illustrators borrowed from his woodcut, even
after they had seen living rhinoceroses without plates and
scales.
Dom Manuel sent the
rhinoceros to Pope Leo X in Rome, who had much admired
'Hanno', the elephant the king had sent him the
year before. Sadly, the ship carrying the new gift sank before it
reached Rome.
T.H. Clarke, The Rhinoceros from Dürer to S (London, 1986)
G. Bartrum (ed.), Albrecht Dürer and his legacy: (London and N.J., The British Museum Press and Princeton University Press, 2002)
G. Bartrum, German Renaissance prints, 149, exh. cat. (London, The British Museum Press, 1995)