|
German painter and
draughtsman. He was first mentioned in 1576 in the Nuremberg "Ratsverlässe"
as a painter and citizen of the town. He lived in Nuremberg until 1584
when he was called by Duke William V of Bavaria to the court in Munich.
From 1585 he was court painter to Emperor Rudolph II in Prague, where
he received an annual salary of 100 thalers until his death.
The artistic achievements of Hoffmann's Nuremberg period is much better
documented than his later career: most of his known paintings and drawings
date from the years between 1573 and 1585.
Hoffmann is
perhaps best known for his numerous copies after drawings by Dürer.
He was among the most gifted of the many artists working at the end of
the 16th century in a stylistic trend that has come to be known as the
Dürer Renaissance. He made not only exact or slightly changed copies but
also free variations of Dürer's originals, and also different versions
of one and the same drawing, signing perhaps one with his own monogram,
another with that of Dürer.
Works
|