Forum Discussion #1 (Albrecht Durer)

When Albrecht Drer died in 1528 at the age of 56, his fame was unparalleled for any artist from north of the Alps. A contemporary of Michelangelo, Drer espoused the traditions and techniques of Renaissance Italy (and had traveled there) while placing creative emphasis on printmaking and continuing the cultivation for the Northern tradition of meticulous detail.

Perhaps most fascinatingly (at least to our contemporary moment), Drer was the first artist to master the self-portrait. Other artists had included their likenesses before Drer, but Drer returned to the subject repeatedly, rewarding it with its own tropes and techniques. He painted three self-portraits in this lifetime and completed several others as engravings and drawings (the first he made silverpoint at the age of 13). Far and away the most well-known of any of these portraits is the last he painted, made at the age of 28, in 1500. The image is widely regarded as one of the most influential self-portraits in history.

This artwork is considered by historians to be quite modern. What specifically makes this portrait “modern” or unique for its time? Be specific. Must be at least 500 words with 3 citations from 3 different credible source