This example has been cut from an impression of Dürer's "Nemesis" (also known as the "Great Fortune", and depicted as a winged woman standing on a globe), with care taken to isolate the wings - hence the missing top right corner, which excludes the back of Fortune's head - although there is a fold of drapery in the bottom left. The cutting has been untidily done, whilst the paper has yellowed and there are a series of dark brown stains on the left. The card mount has been abraded in all four corners as the red sealing wax which held it into its mount was removed; there is a glue stain just below the print's top right corner.
Whilst the absence of most of the print makes the state impossible to determine with certainty, the scratches at the tips of the feathers and the heavy inking suggest that it is state 2.b.
This example was included in Case X of the Educational Series, devoted to "Illustrations of Etching, Engraving, and Outline Drawing". It shared a frame with WA.RS.ED.237.b, an enlarged copy by Ruskin after the wing of the angel in Rembrandt's "Angel appearing to the Shepherds", itself in the preceding frame. The Dürer was intended as a comparison to the Rembrandt, which Ruskin described in his Educational catalogues as 'an example of every kind of badness'; he hoped that his students would 'have no difficulty, in this one instance at least, in knowing good work from bad'. Whilst acknowledging that the Dürer went 'as far as art has yet reached in delineation of plumage', he still told his students that observing the movements of live birds would show them 'almost a new meaning of the meaning of form and colour in creation' (Lectures on Art, § 113 = XX.104).
Elsewhere, Ruskin described how the 'luxury' of the 'wanton and floating Fortune' was a result of a typically northern 'strange fear and melancholy' which 'took ... a feverish and frantic tendency towards the contemplation of death' and 'brought a bitter mockery and low grotesque into ... art'; this was embodied by Dürer ("Abbeville" Catalogue, § 24 = XIX.260).
Presented by John Ruskin to the Ruskin Drawing School (University of Oxford), 1875; transferred from the Ruskin Drawing School to the Ashmolean Museum, c.1949.
Schoch, Rainer, Mende, Matthias, and Scherbaum, Anna, Albrecht Dürer: das druckgraphische Werk, 3 (Munich/London/New York: Prestel, 2001-2004), no. 33
Meder, Josef, Dürer-Katalog, ein handbuch über Albrecht Dürers stiche, radierungen, Holzschnitte, deren zustände, ausgaben und wasserzeichen (Wien: Gilhofer & Ranschburg, 1932), no. 72
Bartsch, Adam von, Le Peintre Graveur, 21 vols (Vienna: J. von Degen, 1803-1821), cat. vol. VII, pp. 91-2, no. 77
Ruskin, John, Catalogue of the Educational Series (London: Smith, Elder, 1871), cat. Educational no. X.3.K
Ruskin, John, Catalogue of the Educational Series (London: Spottiswoode, 1874), cat. Educational no. 237
Hollstein, F. W. H., German Engravings Etchings and Woodcuts, ca. 1400 - 1700 (Amsterdam: Menno Hertzberger, 1954-), cat. vol. VII, p. 66, no. 72
Bartsch, Adam von, The Illustrated Bartsch, founding editor Walter L. Strauss, general editor John T. Spike (New York: Abaris Books, 1978-), no. 1001.77
Ruskin, John, ‘References to the Series of Paintings and Sketches, From Mr. Ruskin's Collection, Shown in Illustration of the Relations of Flamboyant Architecture to Contemporary and Subsequent Art’, Edward T. Cook and Alexander Wedderburn, eds, The Works of John Ruskin: Library Edition, 39 (London: George Allen, 1903-1912), 19
Ruskin, John, ‘The Ruskin Art Collection at Oxford: Catalogues, Notes and Instructions’, Edward T. Cook and Alexander Wedderburn, eds, The Works of John Ruskin: Library Edition, 39 (London: George Allen, 1903-1912), 21, cat. Educational no. 237
Ruskin, John, ‘Lectures on Art: Delivered Before the University of Oxford in Hilary Term, 1870’, Edward T. Cook and Alexander Wedderburn, eds, The Works of John Ruskin: Library Edition, 39 (London: George Allen, 1903-1912), 20