Schongatter, Or Shoes

schongauer colmar

SCHONGATTER, or SHOES, MARTIN (1450–c. 1488), the most able engraver and painter of the early German school. His father was a goldsmith named Casper, a native of Augsburg, who had settled at Colmar, where the chief part of Martin's life was spent? Schongauer established at Colmar a very important school of engraving, out of which grew the " little masters " of the succeeding generation, and a large group of Nuremberg artists. As a painter, Schongauer was a pupil of the Flemish Roger Van der Weyden the Elder, and his rare existing pictures closely resemble, both in splendour of colour and exquisite minuteness of execution, the best works of contemporary art in Flanders. Among the very few paintings which can with certainty be attributed to him, the chief is a magnificent altarpiece in the church of St Martin, at Colmar, repre- senting the Virgin and Child, crowned by Angels, with a background of roses - a work of the highest beauty, and large in scale, the figures being nearly life size. The Colmar Museum possesses eleven panels by his hand, and a small panel of David with Goliath's Head in the Munich Gallery is attributed to him. The miniature painting of the Death of the Virgin in the English National Gallery is probably the work of some pupil.2 In 1488 Schongauer died at Colmar, according to the register of St Martin's church.

The main work of Schongauer's life was the production of a large number of most highly finished and beautiful engravings, which were largely sold, not only in Germany, but also in Italy and even in England. In this way his influence was very widely extended. Vasari speaks of him with much enthusiasm, and says that Michelangelo copied one of his engravings - the Trial of St Anthony.3 Schongauer was known in Italy by the names "Bel Martino" and "Martino d'Anversa." His subjects aro always religious ; more than 130 prints from copper by his hand are still known, and about 100 more are the production of his bottega.4 Most of his pupils' plates as well as his own are signed M +S. Among the most beautiful of Sehongauer's engravings are the series of the Passion and the Death and Coronation of the Virgin, and the series of the Wise and Foolish Virgins ; as much as £420 has been given for a fine state of the Coronation plate. All are remarkable for their miniature-like treatment, their brilliant touch, and their chromatic force. Some, such as the Death of the Virgin and the Adoration of the Magi, are richly-filled compositions of many figures, treated with much largeness of style in spite of their minute scale. Though not free from the mannerism of his age and country, Schongauer possessed a rare feeling for beauty and for dignity of pose; and in technical power over his graver and copper plate he has never been surpassed.

The British Museum possesses a fine collection of Seliongauer's prints. Fine facsimiles of his engravings have been produced by Amand-Durand with text by Duplessis, Paris, 1831.

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