His ninety-one prints are extremely rare, with sixty surviving in one impression (copy) only, and none in more than five – there are a total of 124 impressions, 80 in Amsterdam. It is thought that because his prints were made using only the shallow, scratched line of drypoint, probably on
tin or a
pewter-type
alloy, only ten to twenty impressions of each could be taken before the plate wore out. Many
engravings by other artists are believed to be copies of missing works by this master. In particular,
Israhel van Meckenem seems to have copied more than thirty. His work is very well drawn and lively, with the interest in detail typical of
Early Netherlandish painting.
Arthur Mayger Hind notes of his style that "he is an artist with a freedom of draughtsmanship quite remarkable at this epoch. If his manner of engraving has something of the irregularity of an amateur, his power of expression is vigorous and masterly." A high proportion depicts secular subjects, more than is typical with artists of the period. Along with his contemporary
Martin Schongauer, the Housebook Master was the leading artist making
old master prints in Germany in his period. Both Schongauer and the Housebook Master had a considerable influence on the prints of
Albrecht Dürer. The Master suggests Netherlandish influence in the modelling of light and shade and in some of his figural types. A small number of paintings are also thought to be his work, notably the
Pair of Lovers in the
Ducal Museum Gotha, the
Speyer Altarpiece (divided among
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin, the
Städel, Frankfurt, and
Augustiner Museum Freiburg, and the
Holy Family (Nuremberg,
Germanisches Nationalmuseum, since 2004). However, many scholars feel the Gotha
Lovers and the
Speyer Altarpiece cannot be by the same artist, and favour attributing only the
Lovers to the Housebook Master. Others disagree, and attribute the engravings and the altarpiece to the same master. ==Erhard Reuwich==