The sea monster by De Canon

1 Personalize your artwork
Material More about this material
Size
Complete set or interchangeable cloth?
Choose the color of the frame
ArtFrame comes as a simple construction kit. View self-assembly instructions.
2 Choose extra options
Acoustic material
Total price
167,-
Or pay 3x 55.66 via Klarna
Preview at home
Art code 545608
The sea monster by De Canon
See it at home, on your wall
Download our app and enter work code 545608
Download for iOS Android
Already filled more than 325,000 walls!
4,304 customers rate us with a 4.8 / 5
Read our reviews
Get even more inspired

Buy this landscape artwork The sea monster by De Canon on canvas, ArtFrame, poster and wallpaper, printed on demand in high quality.

About "The sea monster"

by De Canon

About the artwork

An engraving showing a woman being abducted by a sea monster. This strange scene is one of Dürer's most enigmatic prints. The clue to its understanding appears to lie not in the foreground figures, but in the group in the left background, who demonstrate their anguish at the unfolding event. This is an abduction rather than an elopement. That the reclining woman is a member of the group of nude women, who have been bathing, is indicated by her backwards glance and lack of interest in the merman (a bearded man with a fish’s tail and a moose’s horn) who grips her arm. The man running towards the shoreline is well dressed, and she, although naked, wears an elaborate jewelled headdress, indicative of wealth and status. The woman here is a prized asset rather than a romantic heroine or model of piety. Beyond these general remarks, however, no literary or mythological source has been firmly identified. Dürer himself called it only the ‘sea monster’ in his diary of his trip to the Netherlands. It may be that, although he took various myths of marine abduction as his starting point, Dürer was not concerned to tell a specific story here, merely to explore the pictorial potential of such a scene. A number of Dürer’s compositions at this time are concerned with the naked female form, among them the 'Pupila Augusta' of c.1498, the 'Four Naked Women', dated 1497, and the 'Hercules at the Crossroads' of around 1498. 'The Sea Monster' can thus be seen, partly, as a study of a reclining nude

De Canon Profile picture

About De Canon

Read more…

Customer reviews

This artwork doesn't have reviews yet. 4,304 customers rate us with a 4.8 / 5

    Leo
    Netherlands
    4 / 5
    Verified review from Kiyoh Ordered in March 2024
    Robert P.
    Germany
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Trusted Shops Ordered in November 2020
    Lilian en Ben
    Netherlands
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Kiyoh Ordered in August 2017
    Raoul Vandesompel
    Netherlands
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Kiyoh Ordered in September 2020
    Arjan van der Bij
    Netherlands
    4.5 / 5
    Verified review from Kiyoh Ordered in March 2024
    Jeroen
    Netherlands
    4.5 / 5
    Verified review from Kiyoh Ordered in June 2022
    Gerard
    Netherlands
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Kiyoh Ordered in June 2020
    Kenneth B.
    Germany
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Trusted Shops Ordered in November 2023
    Rijndam Revalidatiecentrum
    Netherlands
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Kiyoh Ordered in March 2017
    Renate H.
    Germany
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Trusted Shops Ordered in January 2021
    Familie Lensink
    Netherlands
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Kiyoh Ordered in June 2020
    Martin D.
    Germany
    5 / 5
    Verified review from Trusted Shops Ordered in March 2021

About the material

ArtFrame™

Interchangeable Art Prints

  • High-quality print
  • Easily interchangeable
  • Acoustic function
  • Large sizes available

More about ArtFrame™