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The Portrait of Jakob Fugger is an oil painting by German Renaissance artist Albrecht Dürer, executed around 1520.
Portrait of Jakob Fugger | |
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Artist | Albrecht Dürer |
Year | c. 1520 |
Type | Oil on canvas (so-called "Tüchlein") |
Dimensions | 69.4 cm × 53 cm (27.3 in × 21 in) |
Location | Staatsgalerie Altdeutsche Meister, Augsburg |
Owner | Bavarian State Painting Collections[1][2] |
History
editJakob Fugger was one of the richest merchants of Augsburg. He was portrayed by Dürer in 1518, when he had been called to the city by emperor Maximilian I, in the course of the Diet of Augsburg. Here the artist was part of delegation of his home city, Nuremberg, and met numerous personalities, including the Fugger with whom he was in good relationships since his second trip to Venice (1506–1507). The artist, however, executed the portrait later, around 1520.
Description
editDürer portrayed Fugger's bust from three-quarters, looking to the left, above a blue background. The man wears a finely embroidered hat on his head, and a wide coat with fur-lining, as a show of his upper social status.
See also
editReferences
edit- Costantino Porcu, ed. (2004). Dürer. Milan: Rizzoli.
Footnotes
edit- ^ "Staatsgalerie Katharinenkirche". Staatsgalerie Katharinenkirche. Retrieved 26 December 2014.
- ^ Entry in the online catalogue of the Bavarian State Painting Collections.