Alfred Rethel (born May 15, 1816, Aachen, Prussia [Ger.]—died Dec. 1, 1859, Düsseldorf) was a German artist who painted historical and biblical subjects on a heroic scale that was rare in the Germany of his time. Rethel is best remembered for his vitriolic series of woodcuts, “The Dance of Death.” Although a conservative, he used middle-class raillery against the Revolution of 1848 in woodcuts anticipating the often leftist vehemence of 20th-century German Expressionism.
Precocious in his art, Rethel entered the Düsseldorf Academy when he was 13 years old and proceeded in 1836 to Frankfurt am Main, where he was chosen to decorate the walls of the venerable Römer Hall. In 1841 he was prizewinner in a contest to decorate the Kaisersaal at Aachen with frescoes on the career of Charlemagne, a project that he was never to complete.
While in Rome in 1844, Rethel painted his “Hannibal Crossing the Alps” cycle, and then spent a few years in Dresden. Symptoms of mental disorder appeared during a second visit to Rome (1852–53). He produced some of his most impressive works in this period while hovering between madness and sanity. He died in a Düsseldorf asylum.
The youthful romanticism of such large-scale works as “Entry of Charlemagne into Pavia” presents a startling contrast to his sardonic, inventive “Dance of Death.” The most famous of his series, “Death as Conqueror over the Barricades” (1848), shows a skeleton on horseback leading revolutionaries past corpses and mourners. In its precision of line and mood, it is reminiscent of Albrecht Dürer’s drawings.