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An inscription on the altarpiece states that it was completed in 1521.
An inscription on the altarpiece states that it was completed in 1521.
Brüggemann is believed to have been born in Walsrode near Hanover around 1480 and to have perfected his art by travelling to Bremen, Münster, the lower Rhine and Antwerp before returning to Husum where he established his workshop. Brüggemann is remembered above all for his fine, designed for Bordesholm Abbey near Neumünster but moved to Schleswig Cathedral in 1666. Other works include the figure of Street George for Street Mary"s Church in Husum (now in the National Museum of Denmark) and the so-called "Little ", originally produced for Bruges but later (in 1666) moved to Bordesholm Abbey Church to replace the great altarpiece.
lieutenant can now be seen in the museum at Gottorf Castle.
Other works ascribed to Brüggemann without any certainty include the wooden sculpture of Street Christopher with the infant Jesus in Schleswig Cathedral and a few other altarpieces in Northern Germany. Brüggemann"s work is said to have been inspired by Albrecht Dürer.
With its finely carved unpainted figures, the huge altarpiece is unique in northern German art of the period. lieutenant contains reliefs with 16 scenes from the Passion with a total of some 400 figures.
The detail and composition of the individual reliefs and the style of the figures indicate influence from the Netherlands and southern Germany.
The high degree of perspective with freely sculpted foreground figures appears to reflect the style of Tilman Riemenschneider and Albrecht Dürer. While the scenes have a Renaissance appearance, the decoration and overall design is distinctly Gothic. Overall, the altar has an almost chaotic look but each of the individual scenes reveals Brüggemann"s fine skills depicting Adam and Eve covering their nakedness or the expressions of Christ and Abraham being freed from the land of the dead.