
Portrait of a Young Man
Historical Context
Hans Leonhard Schäufelein painted this Portrait of a Young Man around 1504 during his Nuremberg period. As Dürer's primary workshop assistant, Schäufelein absorbed his master's approach to portraiture while developing a more linear, flatter personal style. His portraits document the Nuremberg bourgeoisie during the city's golden age. The oil medium allowed for rich tonal transitions and glazed layers of color that created luminous depth impossible with the older tempera technique. Portraiture in this period served multiple functions: documenting individual appearance, commemorating social status, and demonstrating the patron's wealth through the quality of the commissioned work.
Technical Analysis
Oil on panel with Nuremberg school precision and careful rendering of the sitter's individual features. Schäufelein's portraiture shows Dürer's influence in the facial modeling with his own more graphic linear approach.
See It In Person
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