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In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Around 1506, Albrecht Dürer designed a series of six ornate woodcuts of labyrinthine designs after a set of engravings by the school of Leonardo da Vinci, which he may have seen or acquired during an early trip to Italy. Though Dürer left them unsigned, possibly because he borrowed their source material, he referred in his diary to giving away his series of knots on a trip to the Netherlands, and this title has become standard. These impressions are printed on a thin, nearly translucent Italian paper, which may have influenced scholars to occasionally interpret them as embroidery patterns.
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Albrecht Dürer|Leonardo da Vinci — “The Third Knot”. Interla
Albrecht Dürer|Leonardo da Vinci — Embroidery Pattern with S
Albrecht Dürer|Leonardo da Vinci — Embroidery Pattern with R
Albrecht Dürer|Leonardo da Vinci — “The First Knot”. Interla
Albrecht Dürer|Leonardo da Vinci — Embroidery Pattern with S
Albrecht Dürer|Leonardo da Vinci — Embroidery Pattern with a
Albrecht Dürer|Leonardo da Vinci — “The Fourth Knot”. Interl
Albrecht Dürer|Leonardo da Vinci — “The Fifth Knot”. Interla
Albrecht Dürer|Leonardo da Vinci — “The Sixth Knot”. Interla
Albrecht Dürer|Leonardo da Vinci — “The Fourth Knot”, Interl
Albrecht Dürer|Leonardo da Vinci — “The Second Knot”. Interl
Albrecht Dürer|Leonardo da Vinci — “The Sixth Knot”. Interla