b ?Schwabisch Gmund, 1484 or
1485; d Strassburg [now Strasbourg, France], 1545.
German painter, printmaker, draughtsman and stained-glass designer.
Such contemporaries as Jean Pelerin (De artificiali perspectiva,
1521) and the Alsatian humanist Beatus Rhenanus in 1526 counted him
among the greatest artists of his time. In the opinion of
specialists today, Baldung’s work places him only half a step behind
Grünewald, Durer and Hans Holbein the younger. A prodigious and
imaginative artist of great originality, versatility and passion,
Baldung was fascinated with witchcraft and superstition and
possessed a desire for novelty of subjects and interpretation that
sometimes borders on the eccentric. The new themes he introduced
include the supernatural and the erotic. He was the first to show
the erotic nature of the Fall in his chiaroscuro woodcut of Adam
and Eve (1511; Hollstein, no. 3) and illustrated the successive
stages of mating behaviour of horses in his woodcut series of Wild Horses in the forest (1534; Hollstein, nos 238–40); and he
is remembered especially for his images of witches. Durer influenced
him only in an early stage but not lastingly. Baldung had a very
different sensibility and lacked Durer’s sense of decorum. Grunewald,
whose monumental Isenheim Altarpiece (Colmar, Mus. Unterlinden) was
created near by during the years Baldung worked in Freiburg im
Breisgau, influenced him only temporarily.
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