SANDRART, Joachim von - b. 1609 Frankfurt/Main, d. 1688 Nürnberg - WGA

SANDRART, Joachim von

(b. 1609 Frankfurt/Main, d. 1688 Nürnberg)

German painter, engraver, and writer on art. He travelled widely and was the most highly regarded German artist of his day (he was ennobled in 1653), but he is now remembered almost exclusively for his treatise Teutsche Academie der Edlen Bau-, Bild- und Mahlerey-Künste (German Academy of the Noble Arts of Architecture. Sculpture and Painting), published in Nuremberg in 1675-79 (a Latin edition followed in 1683).

This treatise, organized into three main parts, is a source-book of major importance. The first part is an introduction to the arts of architecture, painting, and sculpture put together largely from material taken from earlier sources such as Vasari and van Mander. The second part, consisting of biographies of artists, likewise contains much material borrowed from previous writers but also much that is original, in particular about German artists (it was Sandrart who was the first to use the name Grünewald) and on contemporary artists that the author knew personally. The third part contains information about art collections and a study of iconography, and remarkably Sandrart also included in his book a chapter on Far Eastern art.

Sandrart was the first director (1662) of the Academy at Nuremberg (the earliest such in Germany).

Captain Bicker's Company Waiting to Welcome Marie de Medicis in September 1638
Captain Bicker's Company Waiting to Welcome Marie de Medicis in September 1638 by

Captain Bicker's Company Waiting to Welcome Marie de Medicis in September 1638

This painting commemorates Marie de Medicis’ visit to Amsterdam in 1638. Nineteen militiamen await the arrival of the Dowager Queen of France. The reception took place in the Great Hall at the militia’s headquarters. After Marie’s visit the militia decided to decorate the hall with portraits of militiamen, of which this is one.

February
February by

February

Sandrart, best known for his major art history published in 1675 under the title “Teutsche Academie” is one of the few artist-writers whose painterly oeuvre was on a par with his literary ambitions.

For Prince Maximilian of Bavaria, Sandrart painted allegories of day and night as well as a cycle of twelve paintings of the months of the year for the dining room of the Old Palace in Schleissheim. The months, accompanied by verses, were widely distributed in the form of engravings. They are illustrated by life-size half figures set in landscapes or interiors and show characteristic activities associated with the respective seasons and surrounded by their natural attributes. November, under the zodiac sign of Sagittarius the hunter, shows a hunter’s return. With his nervous dogs on a short leash and his catch slung over his shoulder, he is heading towards a castle in the middle distance. A keen wind tears the leaves from the trees and scatters them through the air.

Landscape and genre, still-life and allegory are combined in a picture that epitomizes the month of November in concentrated form. Only briefly and in passing does the hunter glance to one side, and once more we find an allegorical personification of time passing.

Mars, Venus and Cupid
Mars, Venus and Cupid by

Mars, Venus and Cupid

Matthias Grünewald
Matthias Grünewald by

Matthias Grünewald

This is a copy of the self-portrait of Matthias Gr�newald, now in the Universitätsbibliothek, Erlangen.

Matthias Grünewald in his Youth
Matthias Grünewald in his Youth by

Matthias Grünewald in his Youth

This engraving was published in the Academia Picturae in 1675.

November
November by
The Old Matthias Grünewald
The Old Matthias Grünewald by

The Old Matthias Grünewald

This engraving was published in the Academia Picturae in 1683.

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