
Portrait of Levinus Memminger
Michael Wolgemut·1485
Historical Context
Michael Wolgemut, who ran the largest workshop in Nuremberg and was the teacher of Albrecht Dürer, also collaborating on the Nuremberg Chronicle woodcuts, created this work around 1485, now in Madrid's Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum. Portrait painting emerged as a major genre during the fifteenth century, reflecting the growing emphasis on individual identity and the secular confidence of the merchant and aristocratic classes. This work belongs to the Early Renaissance, the transformative period in European art when painters first applied mathematical perspective, naturalistic figure modeling, and archaeological interest in antiquity to the inherited traditions of medieval devotional painting.
Technical Analysis
The portrait demonstrates skilled observation of individual features and the rendering of textile textures, combining naturalistic likeness with the dignified presentation expected in commemorative portraiture.
_(1434-1519)_-_Heiliger_Laurentius_und_Erzengel_Michael_mit_Schwert_und_Waage_-_1437_-_F%C3%BChrermuseum.jpg&width=600)





