10 things to know about Albrecht Dürer
Alastair Smart traces the life and work of perhaps the finest printmaker in the history of art, bringer of the Renaissance to Northern Europe and creator of works such as Adam and Eve, Melencolia I and The Apocalypse. Illustrated with lots offered at Christie’s

Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528), Adam and Eve, 1504 (detail). Engraving. Sheet: 253 x 193 mm. Estimate: £300,000-500,000. Offered in Old Master Prints on 7 July 2026 at Christie’s in London
Even as a 13-year-old, he was breaking new ground
Albrecht Dürer was born in the German city of Nuremberg in May 1471, one of 18 children born to Albrecht and Barbara Dürer (only three of whom survived to adulthood). His father — after whom he was named — was a successful goldsmith of Hungarian heritage, and young Albrecht apprenticed with him before deciding on an artistic career instead.
He showed talent at an early age. The silverpoint Self-portrait at the Age of Thirteen from 1484 — in which he depicted himself wide-eyed and chubby-cheeked — is the earliest securely attributed self-portrait by a European master that survives, and was created when he had barely become a teenager.
Dürer’s home city was one of the most important in Europe
Lying at the heart of the Holy Roman Empire — and, indeed, Europe — Nuremberg was an economic and manufacturing hub. Silver and copper mined in nearby Saxony and Bohemia were transformed by the city’s myriad metalworkers into utilitarian and luxury wares. The city was also a crucible of humanist thought — home to the likes of Willibald Pirckheimer, Konrad Celtis and Philipp Melanchthon. Reflecting on its multiple printing houses (which helped to circulate the messages of the Reformation rapidly), Martin Luther called it ‘the eyes and ears of Germany’.
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Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528), The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, from: The Apocalypse, circa 1497-98. Woodcut. Block: 398 x 280 mm. Sheet: 401 x 290 mm. Estimate: £60,000-80,000. Offered in Old Master Prints on 7 July 2026 at Christie’s in London
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Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528), The Whore of Babylon, from: The Apocalypse, circa 1496-97. Woodcut. Block and sheet: 390 x 281 mm. Estimate: £30,000-50,000. Offered in Old Master Prints on 7 July 2026 at Christie’s in London
As enlightened as this sounds, there still existed in Nuremberg a Gothic, medieval sensibility, too — something that Dürer tapped into with his fantastical woodcut series from 1497-98, The Apocalypse. The approaching end of the century prompted rumours about the approaching end of the world — and omens in the form of comets, eclipses, floods and plagues were interpreted in the same vein. Scenes from The Apocalypse, derived from the biblical Revelation of Saint John, merely added to the prevailing eschatological mood.
He is credited with bringing the Renaissance to Northern Europe
Dürer travelled throughout his life, picking up inspiration and clients abroad on a regular basis. His first major trip was from 1490 to 1494 — his so-called Wanderjahre (journeyman years) — in which he visited Frankfurt and Basel, among other places. A brief return to Nuremberg for his wedding (his father having arranged a marriage to Agnes Frey, daughter of a wealthy local merchant) was followed by another trip, this time across the Alps to Venice.
Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528), The Prodigal Son, circa 1496. Engraving. Plate: 247 x 189 mm. Sheet: 248 x 190 mm. Estimate: £25,000-35,000. Offered in Old Master Prints on 7 July 2026 at Christie’s in London
It was there that he became fascinated by the work of Andrea Mantegna and Giovanni Bellini (the former’s sculptural nudes and the latter’s Madonnas in particular). In subsequent decades, Dürer gained considerable renown in Italy, where even the art historian Giorgio Vasari — notably dismissive of artists from beyond Tuscany, let alone Italy — praised his ‘beautiful fantasies and inventions’.
He was a fine painter, and an even finer printmaker — perhaps the greatest ever
Dürer’s painted oeuvre is dominated by portraits, altarpieces and private devotional imagery. (On his trip back across the Alps from Venice, he also painted a series of topographical watercolours, said by some to be the first pure landscape studies in art history.) It is, however, the pioneering woodcuts and engravings on which his artistic reputation really rests.
Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528), Adam and Eve, 1504. Engraving. Sheet: 253 x 193 mm. Estimate: £300,000-500,000. Offered in Old Master Prints on 7 July 2026 at Christie’s in London
In one of his most famous, Adam and Eve, he captures the perfection of the world’s first couple before the Fall, showing them in idealised, near-symmetrical poses on either side of the Tree of Knowledge. The figure of Adam was inspired by the Apollo Belvedere, a Hellenistic sculpture that had recently been excavated near Rome (in 1489). Dürer brought unprecedented detail and subtlety of line to the medium of engraving — as witnessed best of all here in the figures’ skin and the bark of the trees.
Between 1513 and 1514, Dürer produced the three engravings known as his Master Prints
In a period of around 12 months, Dürer created his trio of so-called Meisterstiche (Master Prints), comprising three solitary figures in highly symbolic environments: Saint Jerome in his Study, depicting the saint peacefully at work; Melencolia I, in which the winged personification of Melancholy sits dejectedly, head in hand; and Knight, Death and the Devil, featuring a Christian knight riding through the depths of a German forest.
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Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528), Saint Jerome in his Study, 1514. Engraving. Sheet: 241 x 184 mm. Estimate: £50,000-70,000. Offered in Old Master Prints on 7 July 2026 at Christie’s in London
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Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528), Melencolia I, 1514. Engraving. Sheet: 241 x 187 mm. Estimate: £200,000-300,000. Offered in Old Master Prints on 7 July 2026 at Christie’s in London
In this final image, the knight is confronted by the nightmarish sight of Death and a goat-faced devil, but keeps a stoic grip on his reins to ensure the horse’s steady path. Knight, Death and the Devil was revered by Adolf Hitler on the grounds that it celebrated a brave Teutonic hero — however, the horse was actually inspired by Leonardo da Vinci’s designs for the equestrian monument to Francesco Sforza in Milan.
He was the favourite artist of the Holy Roman Emperor
As a sign of his growing social status, Dürer was appointed to the Great Council of Nuremberg in 1509, when he was in his late thirties. He also became court painter to Maximilian I around 1512. The Holy Roman Emperor hoped to earn himself a reputation as a discerning patron of the arts, and to preserve his memory for posterity.
Realising that the mass medium of the woodcut would enable him to achieve both, he commissioned Dürer to complete The Triumphal Arch, for display across his empire. The monumental work is comprised of various scenes glorifying Maximilian’s military feats. With a surface area of more than 10 square metres (measuring 357 x 295 cm), it is one of the largest woodcuts ever made.
Dürer’s rhinoceros is one of the most celebrated animals in art history
Dürer was alive at the time when Hernán Cortés and his conquistadors were claiming the New World for Spain. The exotic booty they brought back to King Charles V (weapons, jewellery, textiles and much else besides) was the talk of all Europe. Dürer saw a selection of Meso-American treasures on a trip to Brussels in August 1520. According to an entry in his travel diary, he had ‘not seen anything in [his] whole life that delighted [his] heart as much as these… marvellously artistic things’.
Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528), Rhinoceros, 1515. Woodcut on laid paper. Block and sheet: 212 x 300 mm. Sold for £604,800 on 13 October 2023 at Christie’s in London
A few years earlier, Portuguese adventurers had caused an even greater sensation by transporting a rhinoceros to Europe from India for their king, Manuel I. Dürer never saw the animal himself, but capitalised on the furore about it — producing a woodcut image of the rhino based on a sketch by a German merchant in Lisbon. Dürer’s version came with numerous fanciful additions intended to fire the viewer’s imagination — including folds of skin that looked like armour.
He had one of the most famous signatures in art
Dürer was keenly aware of what today we would call his own branding. In the mid-1490s, he started signing his works with his initials. Indeed, the ‘AD’ monogram became so esteemed — and valuable — that it was routinely forged by artists copying his work. Dürer even took one of these, Bologna’s Marcantonio Raimondi, to court, prompting the first copyright action in art history.
Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528), Saint Eustace, 1501. Engraving. Sheet: 357 x 262 mm. Estimate: £100,000-150,000. Offered in Old Master Prints on 7 July 2026 at Christie’s in London
Dürer was an author as well as an artist
In his final years, Dürer spent more and more time writing books about art instead of creating it. Ever since his first trip to Italy, he had been a champion of what one might call a ‘Renaissance aesthetic’, determined by divine harmony and proportion. (It has even been suggested that his second trip to Italy, in 1505, was inspired by a desire to learn the secrets of Venetian artist Jacopo de’ Barbari, who had reportedly discovered a system of ideal measurements and proportions.)
In his first book, Lessons in Measurement (1525), Dürer considered, at length, the matter of perspective. He believed that art wasn’t a humble craft, but a lofty endeavour built on theoretical foundations.
He was as feted in death as he was in life
Dürer picked up an illness (perhaps chronic malaria) on a trip to the Netherlands in 1521. From then on, bouts of fever became as regular a part of his life as consultations with a doctor. He died, aged 56, in 1528. His friend Pirckheimer penned for him the tombstone epitaph, ‘What was mortal of Albrecht Dürer lies beneath this mound’.
Other friends are said to have secretly exhumed his body a few days after its burial to make plaster casts of his face and hands. A lock of hair was also cut from his head while he lay on his deathbed and sent — like a saint’s relic — to Strasbourg, to his former pupil Hans Baldung. The lock is now kept in a silver-bound reliquary in Vienna’s Academy of Fine Arts.
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