I. HERMANN, the elder, came to Nuremberg as a worker in brass in 1453 and there became a "master" of his gild. There is only one work that can be ascribed to him with certainty, the baptismal font in the parish church of Wittenberg (1457)• This is decorated with figures of the Apostles.
His chief early work, the tomb of Archbishop Ernest in Magde burg cathedral (1495), is surrounded with fine statuettes of the Apostles under semi-Gothic canopies; it is purer in style than the magnificent shrine of St. Sebald, a tall canopied bronze structure, lavishly decorated with reliefs and statuettes. The general form of the shrine is Gothic, but the details are those of the, 16th century Italian Renaissance treated with much freedom and orig inality. Some of the statuettes of saints attached to the slender columns of the canopy are modelled with much grace and even dignity of form. A small portrait figure of Peter himself, intro duced at one end of the base, is a marvel of clever realism : he has represented himself as a stout, bearded man, wearing a large leathern apron and holding some of the tools of his craft. This gorgeous shrine is a remarkable example of the uncommercial spirit which animated the artists of that time, and of the evident delight which they took in their work Dragons, grotesques and little figures of boys, mixed with graceful scroll foliage, crowd every possible part of the canopy and its shafts, designed in the most free and unconventional way and executed with an utter disregard of the time and labour which were lavished on them.
See R. Bauer, Peter Vischer and das alte Nurnberg (1886) ; C. Head lam, Peter Vischer (igoI).