Rare Dürer artwork ‘found at tip’ fetches £26,500
A 500-year-old engraving by Renaissance artist Albrecht Dürer, which is said to have been found at a tip, has sold at auction for £26,500.
Mat Winter, from Cranbrook, Kent, said he discovered the artwork when he was 11 and was unaware of its value until he took it to a specialist as an adult.
The engraving – titled Knight, Death and the Devil and signed and dated 1513 – was sold in an online auction by Rare Book Auctions in Lichfield, Staffordshire, on Wednesday, surpassing a guide price range of £10,000-£20,000.
The auctioneers’ director, Jim Spencer, told BBC Radio Kent he had seen various reproductions of the image, but when he saw the engraving he “knew in [his] heart immediately that it could only be the hand of Dürer himself”.
Mr Winter said he saw the work in the back of a woman’s car while at the rubbish dump as a child, and asked her if he could take it.
“It’s got so much detail to it, and something told me that’s worth something but I never really knew what,” he said.
Mr Spencer said there was “every possibility” that a museum could bid for the engraving, which he described as “worthy of being in a museum”.
Dürer, born in 1471, was a major painter and printmaker who introduced Renaissance art to Germany and northern Europe.
Mr Winter and Mr Spencer have been contacted for comment following the sale.
Follow BBC Kent on Facebook, on X, and on Instagram. Send your story ideas to southeasttoday@bbc.co.uk or WhatsApp us on 08081 002250.