For Dürer, the print is not a workshop accessory: it is the medium through which image becomes science, narrative and European merchandise.
Why print is central
In Nuremberg, printing enabled serial reproduction. Dürer designed narrative cycles (Apocalypse, Large Passion, Life of the Virgin) and single plates of unprecedented density (Melencolia I). The work travelled without the artist accompanying each impression — birth of transmissible image.
Wood, burin, print
Woodcut
Line cut in coated wood; narrative formats, sharp contrasts. The image is reproducible in hundreds of copies — foundation of European diffusion.
Engraving
Incision in copper; modelling by hatching, precise light. The three master prints of 1513–1514 (Knight, St. Jerome, Melencolia) reach an almost pictorial depth.
Print denotes the impression pulled from the matrix (wood or copper); for Dürer it becomes signature, authority and merchandise controlled from the Nuremberg workshop.
Diffusion and reputation
The Apocalypse established Dürer on the European market before his Italian stays. The Rhinoceros (1515), engraved from reports, circulated in thousands — proof that printed image could fix the continent's visual knowledge.
Three master prints (1513–1514)
Knight, Death and the Devil: moral proof. St. Jerome in His Study: light of the studiolo. Melencolia I: technical thought and creative melancholy.
Collection
Major works
Woodcuts and engravings — NGA, Met, Cleveland sources.
