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Tilman Riemenschneider

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Tilman Riemenschneider

(born c. 1460, Heilgenstadt or Osterode, Domain of the Teutonic Order — died July 7, 1531, Würzburg) German sculptor. Son of a mint master, he settled in Würzburg in 1483 and opened a highly successful workshop. He was a city councillor (1504 – 20) and burgomaster (1520 – 25), but his sympathies with the revolutionaries in the Peasants' War led to a brief imprisonment. His wood and stone sculpture, characterized by sharply folded, flowing drapery, included monumental tombs and altarpieces as well as independent statues and reliefs, and made him one of the major masters of late Gothic art in Germany.

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Art Encyclopedia: Tilman Riemenschneider
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(b Heiligenstadt, c. 1460; d W?rzburg, 7 July 1531). German sculptor. He was one of the most outstanding representatives of the last generation of Gothic sculptors in southern Germany, and one of the most fully documented medieval sculptors.

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Biography: Tilman Riemenschneider
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Tilman Riemenschneider (1468-1531) was the most famous of all German late-Gothic sculptors. His style of carving is beautifully refined, with nervous, crackling drapery folds and superb surface finish of the alabaster, sandstone, or lindenwood with which he worked.

Tilman Riemenschneider was born in Osterode, Saxony. After traveling in the Rhineland and Swabia, he settled in the prince-bishopric of Würzburg in 1483. He became a citizen 2 years later and was mayor of the city in 1520-1521. As a Würzburg councilor, in 1525 he came into conflict with the Church authorities during the Peasants' War - an expression of the Reformation - and was imprisoned and tortured. He died in Würzburg on July 7, 1531.

Like his contemporaries at Nuremberg, notably Veit Stoss, Riemenschneider combined realism with picturesqueness. The figure groups on his altarpieces are crowded and expressively posed, and the folds of their garments are deep-cut and crisp. He developed a highly individual style characterized by a high-pitched sensibility and an intense seriousness. His figures are carefully posed and often seem to affect ungainly attitudes; their expressions are somewhat more restrained than the figures by Stoss.

Riemenschneider's chief early works are the wooden altarpiece of the parish church of Münnerstadt (1490-1492; portions are in Berlin and Munich, the rest are in situ); the stone figures of Adam and Eve carved for the portal of the Marienkapelle in Würzburg (1491-1493), which are among the earliest known realistically treated nude figure sculptures in Germany; and a sandstone Virgin for the Marienkapelle (all three in the Mainfränkisches Museum, Würzburg), of which many variations, generally in wood, made Riemenschneider the most famous sculptor of his day.

Between 1500 and 1520 Riemenschneider carved the superb Assumption of the Virgin wooden altarpiece for the little country church at Creglingen, the stone tomb of Bishop Rudolph von Scherenberg in the Cathedral of Würzburg, and the wooden Altar of the Holy Blood in the Jakobskirche in Rothenburg ob der Tauber (1501-1505). In the center of the Rothenburg altar is the Last Supper; on the wings are the Entry of Christ into Jerusalem and Christ in Gethsemane, brilliantly executed in low relief. Sensing the beauty of the wood itself, Riemenschneider frequently did not polychrome his altarpieces, a novelty at this time.

Riemenschneider's masterpiece of funerary sculpture is the monumental memorial of the emperor Henry II and his wife, Kunigunde, in Bamberg Cathedral (1499-1513), executed in marble. Relief carvings on the sides of the tomb depict legendary events from their lives in a style that reveals a new human understanding.

Further Reading

There is no monograph on Riemenschneider in English. Bernd Lohse and others, eds., Art Treasures of Germany (1958), contains some biographical information on Riemenschneider and reproductions of his works. See also Clara Waters, Painters, Sculptors, Architects, Engravers and Their Works (1899).

Additional Sources

Bier, Justus, Tilmann Riemenschneider, his life and work, Lexington, KY: University Press of Kentucky, 1982.

German Literature Companion: Tilman Riemenschneider
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Riemenschneider, Tilman (Heiligenstadt nr. Erfurt, c.1460-1531, Würzburg), one of the great German wood and stone carvers, presided as master over a busy workshop in Würzburg, where he became a councillor in 1505 and was burgomaster 1520-1. He took the peasant side in the Peasants' War in 1525 (see Bauernkrieg) and, after the rising was crushed, was tortured, imprisoned, and deprived of most of his considerable fortune. His greatest work is the Creglinger Altar (1505-10, at Creglingen nr. Rothenburg). Some other works remain in their original sites (New Minster and cathedral, Würzburg; St Joseph's church, Rothenburg; and Bamberg Cathedral). Riemenschneider's wood carvings were intended to achieve their expression without the aid of paint.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Tilman Riemenschneider
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Riemenschneider, Tilman (tĭl'män rē'mənshnī'dər), c.1460-1531, German Renaissance sculptor, who worked in stone and wood. He was in Würzburg by 1483. In 1520 he was made burgomaster, but he was imprisoned in 1525 because of participation in the peasant insurrection, and little is known about his work in later years. He created slender figures with delicately carved, expressive faces, all arranged in clearly ordered, though not static, compositions. His stone tombs of Bishop Rudolf von Scherenberg in the cathedral at Würzburg and of Emperor Henry II and his wife in the cathedral at Bamberg are well known, as are his stone Adam and Eve (Würzburg Mus.) and his wooden altar in Rothenburg ob der Tauber. Examples of his work are in the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., and in the Metropolitan and Cleveland museums.
Wikipedia: Tilman Riemenschneider
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Self-portrait of Tilman Riemenschneider.

Tilman Riemenschneider (c. 1460 – 7 July 1531) was a German sculptor and woodcarver active in Würzburg from 1483. He was one of the most prolific and versatile sculptors of the transition period between late Gothic and Renaissance, a master in stone and limewood.

Contents

Biography

Tilman Riemenschneider was born between 1445 and 1462 in Heiligenstadt im Eichsfeld in the German province of Thuringia. When Riemenschneider was about five years old, his father lost his possessions and had to leave Heiligenstadt due to his involvement in a violent political conflict, the Mainzer Stiftsfehde. The family resettled in Osterode, where Tilman's father became Master of the Mint (A good position at that time) and where Riemenschneider spent his childhood years.

Riemenshchneider is said to have come to Würzburg for the first time at the age of 18, his Uncle served as notary and financial advisor to the Bishop there, but he did not stay for long at that time. Around 1473 Riemenschneider learned the trade of sculpting and woodcarving throughout the areas of Swabia and the upper Rhine - possibly in Strasbourg and Ulm. At that time the statutes of the guild of sculptors required that an apprentice travel to many different workshops to gain experience. Very little is known about this period of his life but it is likely that he came in contact with the work of Martin Schongauer, whose copper engravings served him later as examples.

In 1483 he settled in Würzburg where, on December 7 of 1483, he joined the Saint Luke's Guild of painters, sculptors and glass workers as a painter's assistant. On February 28, 1485, he married Anna Schmidt, a widow of a master goldsmith with three sons. This marriage not only brought him property but it also meant that he could end his apprenticeship and become a master craftsman. She died, after nearly ten years of marriage, leaving him with a daughter. Tilman would marry another three times after this. While his successive wives were directing the large household, Tilman developed both the artistic and business side of his work. His earliest confirmed work is the Gravestone of Eberhard von Grumbach in the Pfarrkirche at Rimpar, this may be the type of work he started out with before obtaining large Church commissions. He started to receive numerous orders from the town councils of Würzburg and neighboring towns. The earliest large work attributed to him is the Franziskusaltar in the St Jakobskirche in Rothenburg ob der Tauber which is described in the church guide book as 'about 1490', but its style compared to other works of that date is rather primitive, suggesting it may be an earlier work. The town council of Münnerstadt ordered in 1490 an altarpiece for the altar of St Maria Magdalena, the parish church, which included a carving of St Mary Magdalene with Six Angels. In 1491, the town council of Würzburg ordered two life-size stone figures of Adam and Eve for the south portal of the council’s church, the Marienkapelle.

In 1494 his first wife died, leaving him with three stepsons and a daughter. In keeping with the times and his status he remarried in 1497, his second wife bore him two daughters and three sons, all of whom seem to have inherited their fathers artistic talent. Shortly after the death of his first wife in 1495 he created the statue of Mary with child which resides in the Pfarrkirche St Bernard in Würzburg. The writer Herman Hesse described it as follows:

"Dreamily she gazes out from her glass case, far away from our world... in her gracefulness and distinction she is refined to a degree of perfunction far above that of mankind today"

By 1500, he had developed an outstanding reputation as an artist and had become a wealthy Würzburg citizen. Not only did he own a number of houses but he also was a landowner with his own vineyards. His flourishing workshop provided work for as many as forty apprentices doing woodcarving, sculpting and painting. In November of 1504, Riemenschneider became councilman of the city of Würzburg, an office he would fulfill for the next twenty years. This office not only brought him social status but it also helped him obtain many large and profitable orders. Between 1520 and 1524 he even was Mayor of Würzburg.

During the Peasants' War, the city council formed an alliance with peasants who were in revolt across Germany and came into conflict with Konrad von Thüngen, the Prince-Bishop of Würzburg, whose residence, the Marienberg fortress, overlooks the city. On June 4 of 1525, the peasant's army was destroyed, with 8,000 killed, just outside Würzburg by the troops of Georg, Steward of Waldburg-Zeil and the Bishop. After the city surrendered, the full city council, including Riemenschneider, was incarcerated and tortured in the Marienberg citadel. According to legend, both of his hands were broken during the torturing, which ended his artistic career. Together with the rest of the council, Tilman was set free after two months, with loss of most of his property. He received no more major orders and, till his death in 1531 at Würzburg, led a retired life with his fourth wife. His son Jörg from his second marriage continued the workshop after his death. The Riemenschneider name still lives on in the United states in the state of Pennsylvania.

Art

The Grieving for Christ, Maidbronn

The sculptures and woodcarvings of Tilman Riemenschneider are in the late Gothic style, although his later work show mannerism characteristics. His work is characterized by the expressiveness of their faces (often shown with an inward look, as in the self-portrait) and by their detailed and richly folded clothing. The emphasis on expression of inner emotions sets Riemenschneider's work apart from that of his immediate predecessors. Souren Melikian places his best work, such as the Virgin listening to the Annunciation, in the same league as the oil paintings of Albrecht Dürer. Kenneth Clark views the Riemenscheider figures as showing the serious personal piety in Germany in the late fifteenth century and as harbingers of the coming Reformation. Among his successors and/or pupils were Peter Breuer and Philipp Koch.

Major works

Holy Blood Altar by Tilman Riemenschneider in Rothenburg ob der Tauber
Last Supper detail fromHoly Blood Altar in Rothenburg ob der Tauber

The largest collection of his work, 81 pieces, can be found in the Mainfränkisches Museum in the Marienberg citadel in Würzburg.

  • Hassenbacher Vesperbild church of Hassenbach, around 1490, wood.
  • Altar of the Farewell of the Apostles Kleinschwarzenlohe near Nuremberg, Allerheiligenkirche, 1491.
  • Altar Piece, Maria Magdalena Münnerstadt, 1490/92.
  • Adam and Eve Würzburg, Mainfränkisches Museum, 1491/93
  • Sculpture of Bishop Rudolf von Scherenberg, Cathedral of Würzburg, 1496/99.
  • Emperor's Tomb Cathedral of Bamberg, 1499/1513.
  • Mary Salome and Zebedee Würzburg 1501-5 now in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London
  • Saint Anne and her three husbands Munich, Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, 1505/1510, wood.
  • Grieving Maria Würzburg, Mainfränkisches Museum, around 1505.
  • Altar of Maria, Creglingen, around 1505/08, wood.
  • Altar of the Apostles, Altar of the Church Fathers, and Altar of the Annunciation, Carving of St. Kilian, Crucifix, epithet of Hans von Bibra St.Leo church, Bibra near Meiningen, around 1500, wood except epithet.
  • Crucifixion St.Nikolas church in Eisingen, Bavaria, 1500 - 1505.
  • Holy Blood Altar Jakobskirche, Rothenburg ob der Tauber, 1501-1505, wood.
  • Altar of the Apostles, St.-Kilians-Kirche zu Windsheim, 1509, now in the Kurpfälzisches Museum, Heidelberg.
  • Crucifixion Altar church of Detwang, 1510/13, now in the Kurpfälzisches Museum, Heidelberg
  • Tomb of Bishop Lorenz of Bibra Cathedral of Würzburg, 1520/22
  • Madonna of the Rosary, Pilgrim's church of Weinbergen, near Volkach, around 1521/24.
  • The Grieving for Christ (Klosterkirche), 1525, Maidbronn near Würzburg
  • The Assumption of the Virgin center panel of the Creglingen Altarpiece, Herrgottskirche, Creglingen, Germany 1495-1499

References

Literature

The character Goldmund in the book Narcissus and Goldmund by Hermann Hesse serves as an apprentice with a master sculptor who is socially prominent in the town where he worked and whose character appears to be loosely based on that of Riemenschneider. He serves both as an artistic inspiration for Goldmund and as a foil for the - less restrained - temperament of Goldmund.

The plot of Elizabeth Peters' first Vicky Bliss mystery novel, "Borrower of the Night" (1973) centers around the search for a missing Riemenschneider sculpture. Most of the action takes place in Rothenburg ob der Tauber.

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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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German Literature Companion. The Oxford Companion to German Literature. Copyright © 1976, 1986, 1997, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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