Master of the Augsburg Ecce Homo
With Master of the Augsburg Ecce Homo one is old Dutch graphic artist and painter at the beginning of the Early Renaissance called. The artist, whose name is not certain, was given his emergency name after the work he had created, with Christ as the Man of Sorrows (Latin: Ecce Homo ).
The master of the Augsburg Ecce Homo was active around 1540 to 1560. His works, created for the private prayer of the bourgeoisie, show the transition from the late Gothic to the Renaissance. He may be identical to the Hans Weiditz found in Augsburg and Strasbourg .
Works
- Christ as Man of Sorrows (Ecce Homo), woodcut, around 1522. Stuttgart, Staatsgalerie Inv. No. A 17824
- Deluge , Cologne, Wallraf-Richartz-Museum
- Abraham's sacrifice . Munich, Alte Pinakothek , BstGS 5393
- Way to Golgotha . Budapest, Szépművészeti Múzeum , inv. No. 96.3 (master or circle).
Other works ascribed to the master of Augsburg's Ecce Homo or his circle are kept in the Archbishop's Cathedral and Diocesan Museum in Vienna and in the Germanic National Museum in Nuremberg.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Friedrich Winkler: The old Dutch painting. Painting in Belgium and Holland from 1400–1600. Propylaea Publishing House, Berlin 1924.
- ↑ Sebastian Borkhardt: Master of Ecce homo (Hans Weiditz?). "Christ as Man of Sorrows (Ecce Homo)". ( Memento of the original from December 23, 2010 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. c. 1522, Clair-obscur-woodcut, Staatsgalerie Stuttgart, accessed on September 12, 2013.
- ↑ D. Schubert: A second “Deluge” from the “Master of the Augsburg Ecce Homo”. In: Wallraf-Richartz-Jahrbuch. Vol. 33, 1971, ISSN 0083-7105 , pp. 321-328.
- ^ Zsuzsa Urbach: Inventory number 96.3: a road to Calvary attributed to the Master of the Augsburg Ecce Homo. In: Zsuzsanna Dobos (ed.): Ex fumo lucem. Baroque studies in honor of Klára Garas. Presented on her eightieth birthday. Volume 1. Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest 1999, ISBN 963-7441-68-9 , pp. 65-80.