Albrecht Dürer
Albrecht Dürer

The Four Horsemen, from: The Apocalypse (B. 64; M., Holl. 167; S.M.S. 115)

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Albrecht Dürer
The Four Horsemen, from: The Apocalypse (B. 64; M., Holl. 167; S.M.S. 115)
woodcut, circa 1497-98, without watermark, a very good impression from the Latin text edition of 1511, with thread margins or trimmed to the borderline, two small paper losses and a few short tears and nicks at the sheet edges, inscribed in pen and ink on the reverse with the plate number and title No 5 Les 4 Cavaliers à l'Ouverture de Cachets
B., S. 395 x 280 mm.

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Charlie Scott
Charlie Scott

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'... and I looked, and beheld a pale horse: and his name that sat on him was Death, and Hell followed with him. And power was given unto them over the fourth part of the earth, to kill with sword, and with hunger, and with death, and with the beasts of the earth.' (Revelation 6.8)

The Four Horsemen is arguably the most dramatic and dynamic of all of Dürer's compositions. We see the four horsemen, one after the other, as they burst out of heaven and thunder over the earth. Death is the last to come, grinning triumphantly on his haggard old mare. The mouth of hell opens up below, devouring a 'lord of the earth' - perhaps a bishop or king. No-one is spared, women, men, clerics, monks and peasants all fall beneath their hoofs.

Everything conveys a sense of violence and rupture; the four riders are barely contained within the image as the right borderline cuts through an arrow, the horse's head and the peasant falling in the foreground. Panofsky observed that the three horses in the air are shown at different intervals of their galloping movement, thereby creating the impression of time and continuity, not unlike Eadweard Muybridge's photographic recordings of bodies in motion almost five hundred years later.