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Adam Elsheimer

Paintings

The Baptism of Christ Print by Adam Elsheimer

The Baptism of Christ

The Stoning of Saint Stephen Print by Adam Elsheimer

The Stoning of Saint Stephen

Apollo and Coronis Print by Adam Elsheimer

Apollo and Coronis

Saint John the Baptist Print by Adam Elsheimer

Saint John the Baptist

Ceres in the House of Hecuba Print by Adam Elsheimer and Workshop

Ceres in the House of Hecuba

Saint Peter Print by Adam Elsheimer

Saint Peter

Saint Paul Print by Adam Elsheimer

Saint Paul

Saint John the Evangelist Print by Adam Elsheimer

Saint John the Evangelist

Saint Paul on Malta Print by Adam Elsheimer

Saint Paul on Malta

Saint Lawrence prepared for Martyrdom Print by Adam Elsheimer

Saint Lawrence prepared for Martyrdom

House on the mountain, Tondo

House on the mountain, Tondo

Holy Family with Angels

Holy Family with Angels

Nymph Fleeing Satyrs

Nymph Fleeing Satyrs

Landscape with the Temple of Vesta in Tivoli

Landscape with the Temple of Vesta in Tivoli

Landscape with the Flight into Egypt

Landscape with the Flight into Egypt

Adam Elsheimer

Jupiter and Mercury at Philemon and Baucis

Preaching of John the Baptist

Preaching of John the Baptist

Adam Elsheimer

Stoning of St. Stephen

Adam Elsheimer

Venus and Cupid

Adam Elsheimer

Exaltation of the Cross

Adam Elsheimer

Apollo and the Cattle of Admetus

Adam Elsheimer

Aurora

Adam Elsheimer

Ceres and Stellio

Adam Elsheimer

Il Contento

Adam Elsheimer

Jacob's Dream

Adam Elsheimer

Flight into Egypt

Adam Elsheimer

Rest on Flight into Egypt

Adam Elsheimer

The Flight into Egypt

Adam Elsheimer

Glorification of the Cross

Adam Elsheimer

Judith Beheading Holofernes

Jupiter and Mercury at Philemon and Baucis (detail)

Adam Elsheimer

Self-Portrait

Adam Elsheimer

The Burning of Troy

Drawings

Adam Elsheimer

Classical Landscape

See also

After Elsheimer, Adam

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Apollo and Coronis Print by Adam Elsheimer

Apollo and Coronis

Adam Elsheimer (18 March 1578 – 11 December 1610) was a German artist working in Rome who died at only thirty-two, but was very influential in the early 17th century. His relatively few paintings were small scale, nearly all painted on copper plates, of the type often known as cabinet paintings. They include a variety of light effects, and an innovative treatment of landscape. He was an influence on many other artists, including Rembrandt and Peter Paul Rubens.

Life and work

Elsheimer was born in Frankfurt-am-Main, one of ten children and the son of a master-tailor. His father's house (which survived until destroyed by Allied bombs in 1944) was a few metres from the church where Albrecht Dürer's Heller Altarpiece was then displayed. He was apprenticed to the artist Philipp Uffenbach. He probably visited Strasbourg in 1596. At the age of twenty, he travelled to Italy via Munich, where he is documented in 1598.[2]

His stay in Venice is undocumented, but the influence on his style is clear. He probably worked as an assistant to Johann Rottenhammer, some of whose drawings he owned. Rottenhammer was a German who had been living in Italy for some years, and was the first German painter to specialize in cabinet paintings. Uffenbach had specialized in large altarpieces, and although Elsheimer's earliest small paintings on copper seem to date from before he arrived in Italy, Rottenhammer's influence is clear on his mature work.[2]

Elsheimer is believed to have produced some significant works in Venice, such as The Baptism of Christ (National Gallery, London) and The Holy Family (Gemäldegalerie, Berlin) which show the influence of the Venetian painters Tintoretto and Paolo Veronese, as well as Rottenhammer.
The burning of Troy, c. 1604, Alte Pinakothek, 36 x 50 cm


Rome

In early 1600, Elsheimer arrived in Rome and quickly made friends with contacts of Rottenhammer, notably Giovanni Faber, a Papal doctor, botanist and collector originally from Bamberg. He was Curator of the Vatican Botanical Garden, and a member of the Accademia dei Lincei, a small intellectual coterie founded in 1603, and mainly concerned with the natural sciences.

Another friend of Rottenhammer was the Flemish landscape painter Paul Bril, already established in Rome, who was (with Faber) a witness at Elsheimer's marriage, painted a picture together with him (now Chatsworth House), and was owed money by him at his death. Like Faber, Bril was a long-term resident in Rome who had converted from Lutheranism to Catholicism, as Elsheimer did later.

Both Faber and Bril knew Rubens, who was in Rome in 1601, and who became another friend, later reproaching Elsheimer for not producing more work. He knew David Teniers the Elder, recently Rubens' pupil, and there is evidence that they lodged together. In 1604 Karel van Mander, a Dutchman recently returned from Rome, published his Schilder-Boeck which praised Elsheimer's work, and described him as slow-working and making few drawings. He also spent much time in churches, studying the works of the masters. Other writers mention his exceptional visual memory, his melancholy and his kind-heartedness. In a letter after his death, Rubens wrote: "he had no equal in small figures, landscapes, and in many other subjects. ...one could have expected things from him that one has never seen before and never will see."
Holy Family with St John the Baptist, 37.5 x 24 cm, Berlin-

In 1606, Elsheimer married Carola Antonia Stuarda da Francoforte (i.e. Stuart of Frankfurt- she was of Scottish ancestry and a fellow Frankfurter), and in 1609 they had a son. The son was not mentioned in a census a year later, possibly (Klessman says optimistically) because he had been put out to a wet-nurse. She was the recent widow of the artist Nicolas de Breul (born in Verdun) and after Elsheimer's death remarried an Italian artist, Ascanio Quercia, within a year of his death. Elsheimer converted to Catholicism by 1608 (possibly 1606). He was admitted to the Accademia di San Luca, the Roman painters' Guild, in 1606, giving them a self-portrait (his only portrait, and only painting on canvas) now in the Uffizi. In spite of his fame and talents, he appears to have both lived and died in difficult financial circumstances.

Elsheimer's painting of Tobias and the Angel (1602–1603) (the "small" Tobias - now at Frankfurt) was especially well received because of its new conception of landscape. This picture was engraved by Count Hendrick Goudt and as a result was published across Europe. However, his association with Goudt, who lodged and trained with him for several years, was difficult. Elsheimer seems to have borrowed money from Goudt, which according to one account resulted in his brief incarceration in Debtor's prison. After Elsheimer's early death in 1610 in Rome, Goudt owned several of his pictures. Goudt made seven engravings of Elsheimer's paintings, which were crucial in spreading his influence, as very few of his paintings were viewable even by artists; as cabinet paintings they were mostly kept in small and very private rooms.

Elsheimer had a definite preference for choosing rare or original subjects, both for his mythological and religious paintings. Jupiter and Mercury in the house of Philemon and Baucis, (c. 1608, now Dresden) is based on an episode in Ovid, and had never been painted before. The Mocking of Ceres (Kingston, Ontario, a copy exists in the Prado), Apollo and Coronis (Liverpool), and Il Contento (Edinburgh) were equally new. Some of his religious scenes were more conventional, but his selection of the moment to depict, as in St Lawrence prepared for Martyrdom (London), is often unusual.


Influence

His perfectionism, and an apparent tendency to depression, resulted in a small total output, despite the small size of all his pictures. In all about forty paintings are now generally agreed to be by him (see Kressmann below). He made a few etchings, not very successfully. However, his work was highly regarded by other artists and a few important collectors for its quality. He had a clear and direct influence on other Northern artists who were in Rome such as Paul Bril, Jan Pynas, Leonaert Bramer and Pieter Lastman, later Rembrandt's master, who was probably in Rome by 1605. Rembrandt's first dated work is a Stoning of St Stephen which appears to be a response to Elsheimer's painting of the subject, now in Edinburgh. Some works by Italian artists, such as the six pictures from Ovid by Carlo Saraceni now in the Museo di Capodimonte, Naples, also show Elsheimer's clear influence. Rubens, who owned at least four of his works, knew Elsheimer in Rome, and praised him highly in a letter after his death.

In a wider sense, he was influential in three respects. Firstly his night scenes were highly original. His lighting effects in general were very subtle, and very different from those of Caravaggio. He often uses as many as five different sources of light, and graduates the light relatively gently, with the less well-lit parts of the composition often containing important parts of it.

Secondly, his combination of poetic landscape with large foreground figures gives the landscape a prominence that had rarely been seen since the Early Renaissance. His landscapes do not always feature an extensive view; often the lushness of the vegetation closes it off. They are more realistic, but no less poetic, than those of Bril or Jan Brueghel, and play a part in the formation of those of Poussin and Claude. His treatment of large figures with a landscape backdrop looks forward, through Rubens and van Dyck, to the English portrait in the eighteenth century. Soon after his death he became very popular with English collectors, notably King Charles I of England, the Earl of Arundel, and the George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham, and over half his paintings have been in English collections at some time (nearly one third are still in the UK).

Thirdly, his integration of Italian styles with the German tradition he was trained in is perhaps more effective than that of any Northern painter since Dürer (with the exception of his friend Rubens). His compositions tend to underplay the drama of the events they depict (in noticeable contrast to those of Rubens), but often show the start of moments of transformation. His figures are relatively short and stocky, and reflect little of classical ideals. Their poses and gestures are unflamboyant, and their facial expressions resemble those in Early Netherlandish painting rather than the bella figura of most Italian Renaissance work.


Galleries

The largest collection of his work is in Frankfurt. The Alte Pinakothek, Munich has two of his finest night-scene paintings, and Berlin, Bonn, Dresden and Hamburg have paintings. The National Gallery, London has three paintings with others in the National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh, Apsley House, Windsor Castle, Petworth House, the Wellcome Library and Liverpool. In 2006 an exhibition at the Städel, Frankfurt, then Edinburgh, and the Dulwich Gallery in London reunited almost all his oeuvre.[3]

There are drawings, especially in the Louvre and Edinburgh.

Only two works are on public display outside Europe. One is in the Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth (The Flight into Egypt),[4] and the other is the Mocking of Ceres, now in the Agnes Etherington Art Centre in Kingston, Ontario,[5] badly damaged by fire at some point in its history; it had been part of the Dutch Gift to Charles II of England in 1660.[6]

References

Howard, Deborah (1992). "Elsheimer's Flight into Egypt and the Night Sky in the Renaissance". Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte 55 (2): 212–224. doi:10.2307/1482611.
Gronert, Stefan (2003). "Adam Elsheimer in Venedig?. Eine kritische Betrachtung zweier Dokumente". Marburger Jahrbuch für Kunstwissenschaft (in German) (Marburg: Verlag des Kunstgeschichtlichen Seminars der Philipps-Universität Marburg) 30: 211–216.
"Discovering the World in Detail" exhibition Edinburgh information. For the catalogue by Rüdiger Klessmann and others, see References.
Kimbell Art Museum. "The Flight into Egypt". https://www.kimbellart.org. Kimbell Art Museum. Retrieved 9 March 2015.
"Etherington". Aeac.ca. 2012-08-12. Retrieved 2014-01-15.

Klessmann, pp. 138–145, 198, 205 (the last two on the provenance, on which the authors seem not wholly in accord)

Main source

Source unless otherwise stated

Rüdiger Klessmann and others, Adam Elsheimer 1578-1610, 2006, Paul Holberton publishing/National Galleries of Scotland; ISBN 1-903278-78-3

Bibliography

Keith Andrews: Adam Elsheimer. Werkverzeichnis der Gemälde, Zeichnungen und Radierungen. Schirmer/Mosel, München 1985, ISBN 3-88814-142-7; erweiterte Neuauflage 2006, ISBN 3-8296-0244-8.
Franziska Bachner: Gleichartigkeit und Gegensatz. Zur Figurenbildung bei Adam Elsheimer. In: Städel-Jahrbuch. Neue Folge, Bd. 16, 1997, S. 249–256.
Franziska Bachner: Figur und Erzählung in der Kunst Adam Elsheimers. Würzburg 2006 (Dissertation, Universität Würzburg, 1995).
Reinhold Baumstark (Hrsg.): Von Neuen Sternen. Adam Elsheimers „Flucht nach Ägypten“. Anlässlich der Ausstellung Von Neuen Sternen. Adam Elsheimers Flucht nach Ägypten, Alte Pinakothek, München, 17. Dezember 2005 bis 26. Februar 2006. Katalog von Marcus Dekiert. DuMont, Köln 2005, ISBN 3-8321-7583-0.
Ernst Holzinger (1959), "Elsheimer, Adam", Neue Deutsche Biographie (NDB) (in German) 4, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 465–466, (full text online)
Rüdiger Klessmann u. a.: Im Detail die Welt entdecken, Adam Elsheimer 1578–1610. Ausstellungskatalog des Städel-Museums, Frankfurt am Main. Edition Minerva, Frankfurt am Main 2006, ISBN 3-938832-06-1.
Christian Lenz: Adam Elsheimer. Die Gemälde im Städel. Ausstellung 1977 im Städelschen Kunstinstitut. Städel, Frankfurt am Main 1977.
Gottfried Sello: Adam Elsheimer. Beck, München 1988, ISBN 3-406-32026-0.
Andreas Thielemann, Stefan Gronert (Hrsg.): Adam Elsheimer in Rom: Werk – Kontext – Wirkung. Hirmer, München 2008, ISBN 978-3-7774-4255-6.
Alfred Woltmann (1877), "Elsheimer, Adam", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB) (in German) 6, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, p. 66

Adam Elsheimer: Drawings & Paintings (Annotated) Kindle Edition by Raya Yotova (Author)

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