Albrecht Dürer, Art in Black and White

Albrecht Dürer, Art in Black and White
#Exhibitions
Martin Schongauer, The Nativity, Circa 1471-1473, Engraving | Courtesy The National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo

The National Museum of Western Art in Tokyo presents Black Lines Speak: Dürer’s Three Great Books Woodcuts, an exhibition devoted to the graphic masterpieces of Albrecht Dürer. For the first time in Japan, the show brings together the three woodcut series published in 1511: the second Latin edition of the Apocalypse, the Great Passion, and the Life of the Virgin. Together they form a cycle of extraordinary visual and spiritual coherence, in which the German artist expresses the power of image through the sole strength of the engraved line. Hosted in the Prints and Drawings Gallery of the museum’s new wing, the exhibition offers a complete journey through the three books and sets Dürer’s sources in dialogue with the works that later drew inspiration from him. Its curatorial aim is not only to highlight Dürer’s technical mastery but to reveal the intellectual dimension of an artist who transformed printmaking into a universal language. In the Apocalypse series, the prophetic vision unfolds through a dramatic rhythm of lines and contrasts, while the Great Passion conveys an intense sense of human and earthly spirituality. In the Life of the Virgin, the sacred becomes domestic, filled with natural gestures and everyday interiors. In all three, the black line becomes a voice, an essential language capable of evoking motion, depth, and silence. The exhibition also reconstructs the historical and technological context in which Dürer worked, when movable type printing and the illustrated book were opening new paths for the circulation of images. In this sense, Black Lines Speak is also a meditation on the birth of modern visual communication, where art and knowledge began to travel together. As Erasmus of Rotterdam once wrote, “What cannot Dürer express in monochrome, that is, by black lines only?”
Paolo Mastazza - © 2025 ARTE.it for Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo