How to Do a Visual Analysis of a Painting in Art History | Dürer's Saint Jerome
In a small but richly detailed painting by Albrecht Dürer, Saint Jerome appears as a thoughtful hermit, alone in the wilderness and surrounded by symbolic objects. This video explores how Dürer tells Jerome’s story using visual elements like color, line, composition, and texture, a way of studying art known as formal analysis. Jerome stands out not by accident, but through clever design choices that guide our eyes and give the scene balance and meaning. Formal analysis is one of many ways that art historians interpret art. It allows us to engage meaningfully with imagery even if we don’t know much about a work’s subject matter or historical context. Formal analysis teaches us how to look with intention.
Speaker: Dr. Heather Graham
CHAPTERS
0:00 Dürer’s Jerome: A Hermit in the Wilderness
0:41 Looking Beyond the Story
0:59 The Artist’s Visual Language
1:55 Dürer's Composition
2:52 Anchoring the Saint with Lines and Shapes
3:34 The Unifying Power of Color
4:22 Creating Life through Surface Detail
4:44 Why Formal Analysis Matters
Main image: Albrecht Dürer, Saint Jerome, c. 1496 CE, oil on wood, 23.1 x 17.4 cm. The National Gallery, London