Ludwig Krug

[5] Krug's prints were developed in a style that, starting from a youthful phase inspired by the models of Albrecht Durer, Martin Schongauer, and Lucas van Leyden, gradually distanced itself from these artists.

In a later creative period, he gravitated towards the decorative models of Augsburg represented by Hans Schwarz, which were characterized by a certain originality and liveliness.

[1] Krug's works were characterized by naturalistic design and a mixture of Italian decorative elements of late Gothic art.

[5] Among his works are mugs at the Germanisches Nationalmuseum,[1][3] the lid of a cup preserved in the Museum of Fine Arts in Budapest,[1] a golden cup in the treasury of the Basilica of Saint Anthony of Padua,[3] and numerous medals[2] from his time as an engraver at the Nuremberg mint.

[3] Krug's Solnhofen Limestone relief depicting Adam and Eve in the fall of man resides at the Bode Museum in Berlin.

Adam and Eve: The Fall of Man by Krug