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412-37981 Laughing female tennis player holding cell phone and tennis racket
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412-37278 Young male tennis doubles players playing tennis, hitting the ball on blue tennis court
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412-37262 Young male tennis doubles players playing tennis, reaching for the ball on sunny blue tennis court
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412-37236 Young male tennis doubles players playing tennis on tennis court
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412-37231 Focused male tennis doubles players playing tennis on tennis court
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902_05_12290518HighRes Stella Court Treatt, née Hinds, (1895 -1976) with her husband Major Chaplin Court Treatt, (1888-1954) on her left and her brother Errol Hinds, (1908 - 1980) on her right during their Court Treatt expedition, the first successful trip by "road" from Cape Town to Cairo in 1924, using two Crossley cars. From Heroes of Modern Adventure, published 1927
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412-20681 Lawyers walking together through courthouse
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948_05_01266269 Towers on the north side of the market between two gabled houses on the Artus Court, a jewel among the architectural monuments of Gdansk great times. In several northern German cities such as Danzig, Stralsund, Elbing and Thorn built the so-called Arthur yards in the 14th century by the merchants. You should serve social groups and were used diligently.
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917_05_WHA_091_0999 Illustration showing two courting couples using the 'Penny Farthing' Bicycle 1882.
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alb3667622 Knave of Nooses, from The Cloisters Playing Cards. Culture: South Netherlandish. Dimensions: 5 3/16 × 2 3/4 in. (13.2 × 7 cm). Date: ca. 1475-80.The Cloisters set of fifty-two cards constitutes the only known complete deck of illuminated ordinary playing cards (as opposed to tarot cards) from the fifteenth century. There are four suits, each consisting of a king, queen, knave, and ten pip cards. The suit symbols, based on equipment associated with the hunt, are hunting horns, dog collars, hound tethers, and game nooses. The value of the pip cards is indicated by appropriate repetitions of the suit symbol. The figures, which appear to be based on Franco-Flemish models, were drawn in a bold, free, and engaging, if somewhat unrefined, hand. Their exaggerated and sometimes anachronistic costumes suggest a lampoon of extravagant Burgundian court fashions. Although some period card games are named, it is not known how they were played. Almost all card games did, however, involve some form of gambling. The condition of the set indicates that the cards were hardly used, if at all. It is possible that they were conceived as a collector's curiosity rather than a deck for play. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3639652 The Cloisters Playing Cards. Culture: South Netherlandish. Dimensions: Each: 5 3/16 × 2 3/4 in. (13.2 × 7 cm). Date: ca. 1475-80.The Cloisters set of fifty-two cards constitutes the only known complete deck of illuminated ordinary playing cards (as opposed to tarot cards) from the fifteenth century. There are four suits, each consisting of a king, queen, knave, and ten pip cards. The suit symbols, based on equipment associated with the hunt, are hunting horns, dog collars, hound tethers, and game nooses. The value of the pip cards is indicated by appropriate repetitions of the suit symbol. The figures, which appear to be based on Franco-Flemish models, were drawn in a bold, free, and engaging, if somewhat unrefined, hand. Their exaggerated and sometimes anachronistic costumes suggest a lampoon of extravagant Burgundian court fashions. Although some period card games are named, it is not known how they were played. Almost all card games did, however, involve some form of gambling. The condition of the set indicates that the cards were hardly used, if at all. It is possible that they were conceived as a collector's curiosity rather than a deck for play. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3657915 Emperor Charles V (1500-1558) and his Son Philip II of Spain (1527-1598). Artist: Leone Leoni (Italian, Menaggio ca. 1509-1590 Milan). Culture: Italian, Milan. Dimensions: Overall, with frame: 1 5/16 x 1 1/16 x 3/8 in. (3.4 x 2.6 x 1 cm);Visible cameo (confirmed): 33.8 x 26.2 x 9.8 mm. Date: 1550.This is a rare, possibly unique instance of a Renaissance cameo documented in the carver's own words. The eminent Hapsburg court sculptor Leone Leoni wrote in 1550 from Milan to Cardinal Granvella, agent of Charles V in Brussels, that "a fantastic stone" inspired him to carve a double portrait of Charles and his son, Philip II, "the way a sculptor used to do for Caesar and Augustus. On the reverse I represented the Empress so beloved of the Emperor." Isabella of Portugal, wife of Charles and mother of Philip, had died in 1539. Leoni estimated that his work had taken two months. He was perpetually busy with important projects and his attention cannot have been undivided, yet as the precious letter corroborates, he obviously took great care with the cameo's execution.Jugate portraits, in which one profile overlaps another, were indeed invented by the ancient Romans. The object behind the heads here is a winged thunderbolt, borrowed from the imagery of Jupiter. The two men's faces are livelier than Isabella's; her likeness was modeled on a posthumous portrait, possibly painted by Titian.The chip at the top, while unfortunate does not diminish this jewel's power. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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akg8203676 Schnabel, Julian1951 New YorkUntitled #V. 2016. Carbon print on fibre paper laid down on card. 82.5 x 60cm (107 x 80cm). Verso on label signed and numbered. Geuer & Geuer Art GmbH, Düsseldorf (publisher). Number 3/60. Condition: Image carrier slightly wavy. Traces of use and working intended by the artist, especially in the corner areas. Remains of former mounting in the shape of two lugs in the upper margin area. Verso minimal staining in the lower margin area. Enclosed: Exhibition catalogue signed by the artist from the exhibition ""Julian Schnabel. Palimpsest printed works 1983-2016"", Ludwig Museum Koblenz. . Art trade, Van Ham. Copyright: This artwork is not in the public domain. Additional copyright clearance may be required before use of this image. © Julian Schnabel.
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akg7983709 COURTLY CHAOPAO ROBE WITH THE TWELVE SYMBOLS.China. 19th/20th c.Satin silk, embroidered with floss silk in satin stitches and gold thread in appliqué technique. Five spherical buttons made of brass with residue of gilding. Originally, the court robes of the Qing Dynasty's Mandchu ruling elite consisted of two parts: a jacket and a skirt, which where later merged into one garment. Robes in imperial yellow and decorated with the Twelve Symbols of Sovereignty are used for sacrificial ceremonies. Length 145cm, width 186cm. Condition A/B. Supplement: Two ribbons of an official ladies' robe. Head cover. China. Around 1900. Silk, embroidered. Condition A/B.Provenance:-Private collection Baden-Baden. Acquired at Galerie Herbert Cresnik, Baden-Baden. Literature:-Dickinson/Wrigglesworth: Imperial Wardrobe. London 1990. Compare about the TwelveSymbols: p. 75-92. Art trade, Van Ham.
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akg7983711 COURTLY CHAOPAO ROBE WITH THE TWELVE SYMBOLS.China. 19th/20th c.Satin silk, embroidered with floss silk in satin stitches and gold thread in appliqué technique. Five spherical buttons made of brass with residue of gilding. Originally, the court robes of the Qing Dynasty's Mandchu ruling elite consisted of two parts: a jacket and a skirt, which where later merged into one garment. Robes in imperial yellow and decorated with the Twelve Symbols of Sovereignty are used for sacrificial ceremonies. Length 145cm, width 186cm. Condition A/B. Supplement: Two ribbons of an official ladies' robe. Head cover. China. Around 1900. Silk, embroidered. Condition A/B.Provenance:-Private collection Baden-Baden. Acquired at Galerie Herbert Cresnik, Baden-Baden. Literature:-Dickinson/Wrigglesworth: Imperial Wardrobe. London 1990. Compare about the TwelveSymbols: p. 75-92. Art trade, Van Ham.
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akg5304114 Sutton Nicholls. The temple. The Temple in London (containing two of the Inns of Court, namely the Inner Temple and the Outer Temple). Engraved by Thomas Boweles in 1754 after a drawing by Sutton Nicholls dates 1720. London, 1700s. From: Sutton Nicholls, [A Collection of 226 Engravings, etc. illustrating London and Environs]. Maps. C. 18. d. 6. (52). London, British Library. Copyright: Additional permissions needed for non-editorial use.
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akg420198 Dostler, Anton General (Wehrmacht); 10.5.1891 Munich - 1.12.1945 executed Aversa (Italy). - General Dostler shortly before his execution by firing squad of the US army in Aversa on 1 December 1945. (he was found guilty of the death of two American officers and of a further 13. soldiers.- / Photo.
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ibxuhu09931036 Daydreaming of a couple reading and using tablet drinking coffee in the patio
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ibxuhu09931142 Woman embracing her boyfriend while using tablet sitting in the patio of a new house
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ibxuhu09931141 Woman approaching to a distracted man using tablet in their patio
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alb3659789 Set of four three-light sconces (bras de lumière). Culture: French, Paris. Dimensions: Each: H. 32 x W. 15 x D. 10 1 /4 in. (81.3 x 38.1 x 26.0 cm). Date: ca. 1787-88.Music was one of Marie-Antoinette's lifelong diversions. She was taught to perform and sing when young in Vienna, where the opera composer Christoph Willibald Gluck (1714-1787) was her tutor. She amused herself with music several hours a day at the French court and was a devotee of the opera. The queen's enjoyment of music is reflected in the design of these wall lights, which were ordered probably in 1787 or the following year for her use at the Château de Saint-Cloud. Although no precise date or authorship have been established for them, they can easily be recognized among the furnishings listed as in the queen's Cabinet Intérieur in the detailed inventory description of the summer castle drawn up in 1789. Suspended from a gilt-bronze ribbon tied in a bowknot, the back plate of the sconces is shaped like a lyre with a pendant trophy of musical instruments. In addition to music, the decoration also alludes to Bacchus, the Roman deity of wine and drunken revelry who was also patron of viticulture, and who is frequently shown in the company of satyrs dancing to music. Two of the arms are shaped as cornucopias with scrolls and garlands of vine leaves and grapes, their candle dishes piled up with fruit. A satyr mask and thyrsus, the staff topped by a pinecone, an attribute of Bacchus, join the trophy of musical instruments. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3605637 Cabinet (Fassadenschrank). Culture: German, Nuremberg. Dimensions: Overall: H. 104 x W. 84 x D. 30 1/4 in. (264.2 x 213.4 x 76.8 cm); Field measurement: H. 102 5/8 x W. 89 1/4 x D. 28 1/2 in. at mid-height (cornice wider). Date: early 17th century.During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries in Central Europe, the term "woodworker" did not define a single trade. Instead, there were cabinetmakers and chairmakers, each represented by their own guild. The lathe-turned parts of wooden furniture could not be made in the shop but had to be bought from members of an independent turners' guild and the hardware ordered from a master blacksmith. This complex system had been developed to protect guild members from outside competition and to guarantee them a minimum wage. Each master--that is, each qualified member of a guild--was allowed to employ only two journeymen and one or sometimes two apprentices. Only the artisans who worked for one of the many courts of the scattered German territorial states were exempt from these regulations.[1]Apprentices in the extremely conservative cabinetmakers' guild were required to create a masterpiece, or chef d'oeuvre, of highly complicated design in order to qualify as a master. The guilds in different German towns--from the free imperial cities of Augsburg and Nuremberg in southern Germany to the urban strongholds of the Hanseatic League in the north--had diverse requirements for masterpieces. Nor were all the candidates for mastership in a given guild treated equally in this respect. A "foreign" journeyman--and in the patchwork configuration of states in the Holy Roman Empire, that might mean a man born a stone's throw from the boundary lines of the region under a guild's control--often had to produce a more elaborate and costlier masterpiece than a local applicant for membership. A guild member's son or son-in-law or the prospective husband of a master's widow, all of whom were likely to acquire an already established workshop, were also assigned an easier task.[2] The cabinet piece not only had to demonstrate the design skills of the journeyman and his acquaintance with the architectural theory of the period[3]--for the practice of imitating architecture in furniture was widespread in Germany--but also had to show his mastery of joinery. Sometimes the assignment even included producing a simple structure, such as a window frame. The candidates had to invest money to buy the materials they needed and were unable to earn anything during the time they spent working on the piece. In most cases they were forced to sell their high-quality masterpiece immediately after presenting it to the aldermen of the guild, in order to pay city taxes, to cover entrance contributions to various guild funds, and to raise capital to establish their own business.We do not know if the Museum's splendid cupboard was a masterpiece; certainly it represents a tour de force of cabinetmaking. This type of cupboard with an architectural front (hence its German name, Fassadenschrank--literally, "facade cabinet") became popular in Germany during the late Gothic period. The Museum's example clearly reflects Italian Renaissance palace architecture of the sixteenth century. Certain carved elements on the pediments and in the niches and also the hardware ornaments indicate that it should be dated to the early seventeenth century, although its form in general would suggest the period between 1550 and 1575. It consists of a drawer-podium supporting a two-door cabinet, and at the top a hollow cornice. The form developed from the simple idea of placing two similar chests on top of each other to create an optical unit.[4] Characteristic details are the heavy wrought-iron handles, two on each side, which made it possible to dismantle the object quickly in case of fire.[5]The cupboard's majestic appearance derives from its balanced proportions, and its visual interest lies in architectural details such as the projecting and recessed components of the front and the use of woods of different colors and grain, which evoke the marble slabs on Renaissance facades.[6] When new, these woods must have offset each other to an even more striking effect. Unusual is the pretzel shape of the handles.Large cupboards were often built to contain a bride's linens. The long pine shelves of this one are marked with numbers (from one through thirty-one) to indicate exactly where rolls of fabric or folded items should be placed.[7]This Fassadenschrank and a related cupboard were among the first pieces of Central European furniture to enter the Metropolitan Museum, and they remain the most important examples of their type in North American museums.[8][Wolfram Koeppe 2006]Footnotes:[1] Michael Stürmer. "'Bois des Indes' and the Economics of Luxury Furniture in the Time of David Roentgen." Burlington Magazine 120 (December 1978), p. 800; Michael Stürmer. Handwerk und höfische Kultur: Europäische Möbelkunst im 18. Jahrhundert, Munich, 1982; Michael Stürmer. Herbst des alten Handwerks: Meister, Gesellen und Obrigkeit im 18. Jahrhundert. Serie Piper 515. Munich, 1986; Christopher Wilk, ed. Western Furniture, 1350 to the Present Day, in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London. London, 1996, pp. 84, 98 (entries by Sarah Medlam; the two German cabinets she discusses are eighteenth-century; however, the guild situation had not changed since the late medieval period).[2] Douglas Ash. "Gothic." In World Furniture: An Illustrated History, ed. Helena Hayward, pp. 26-24. New York, 1965, p. 34, fig. 86; Hans Huth. "Renaissance: Germany and Scandinavia." In World Furniture: An Illustrated History, ed. Helena Hayward, pp. 47-52. New York, 1965, p. 48, fig. 136 (dated 1541); Peter Wilhelm Meister. "The Eighteenth Century: Germany." In World Furniture: An Illustrated History, ed. Helena Hayward, New York, 1965, p. 146, fig. 572; Heinrich Kreisel. Die Kunst des deutschen Möbels: Möbel und Vertäfelungen des deutschen Sprachraums von den Anfängen bis zum Jugendstil. Vol. I, Von den Anfängen bis zum Hochbarock. Munich, 1968, pp. 74-76, 180-85, figs. 91, 93, 101, 142-51, 389, 390; Wolfram Koeppe. "Vergessene Meisterwerke deutscher Möbelkunst: Die Meisterstücke der Breslauer Schreinerzunft im 18. Jahrhundert." Kunst & Antiquitäten, 1991, no. 4, pp. 38-45; Wolfram Koeppe. Die Lemmers-Danforth-Sammlung Wetzlar: Europäische Wohnkultur aus Renaissance und Barock. Heidelberg, 1992, pp. 118, 157-59, 162-64, 168, 192-94, nos. M52, M88, M92, M97, color ills. pp. 190, 192, 242; and John Morley. The History of Furniture: Twenty-five Centuries of Style and Design in the Western Tradition. Boston, 1999, p. 74, fig. 129.[3] The ten-part treatise De Architectura (after 17 B.C.) by the Roman architect Vitruvius Pollio was very influential. It had been reissued in Latin in 1485 in Rome by Giovanni Sculpicio. One of the best-known editions north of the Alps was Sebastiano Serlio's treatise Regole generali di architettura sopra le cinque maniere de gli edifici published in 1537 in Venice and translated into German in 1542; Hubertus Günther. Deutsche Architekturtheorie zwischen Gotik und Renaissance. With contributions by Michael Bode et al. Darmstadt, 1988. Another important German translation of Vitruvius's De Architectura, with added illustrations, was Vitruvius Teutsch by Walther Hermann Ryff (Rivius) of Nuremberg (ca. 1500-after 1545), published in 1548. Ryff, who added his own commentary, dedicated the work "to all artistic craftsmen, foremen, stonecutters, builders, headgear makers and gunsmiths,...painters, sculptors, goldsmiths, cabinetmakers, and all who have to use the compass and the guiding ruler in an artistic manner." Thus, Ryff intended his publication not for a small circle of humanist connoisseurs but for practicing craftsmen, including the makers of fine furniture; see Ingrid Dann. "Walther Ryff." In Hubertus Günther. Deutsche Architekturtheorie zwischen Gotik und Renaissance. With contributions by Michael Bode et al. Darmstadt, 1988, pp. 79-88, especially p. 81.[4] Franz Windisch-Graetz. Möbel Europas von der Romanik bis zur Spätgotik. Munich, 1982, p. 265, no. 238; Wolfram Koeppe. Die Lemmers-Danforth-Sammlung Wetzlar: Europäische Wohnkultur aus Renaissance und Barock. Heidelberg, 1992, pp. 157-59, no. M88, color ill. p. 190.[5] For similar cabinets, see Peter Wilhelm Meister and Hermann Jedding, eds. Das schöne Möbel im Laufe der Jahrhunderte. Heidelberg, 1958, fig. 101; Margrit Bauer, Peter Märker, and Annaliese Ohm. Europäische Möbel von der Gotik bis zum Jugendstil. Museum für Kunsthandwerk. Frankfurt am Main, 1976, figs. 17, 18 (the captions to these two illustrations are in reverse positions); Franz Windisch-Graetz. Möbel Europas: Renaissance und Manierismus, vom 15. Jahrhundert bis in die erste Hälfte des 17. Jahrhunderts. Munich, 1983, pp. 356-57, nos. 213, 294; and Wolfram Koeppe. Die Lemmers-Danforth-Sammlung Wetzlar: Europäische Wohnkultur aus Renaissance und Barock. Heidelberg, 1992, pp. 117-18, no. M52, color ill. p. 183.[6] Erik Forssman. Säule und Ornament: Studien zum Problem des Manierismus in den nordischen Säulenbüchern und Vorlageblättern des 16. und 17. Jahrhunderts. Acta Universitatis Stockholmiensis. Stockholm Studies in History of Art I. Stockholm, 1956, pp. 39ff.[7] The cabinet was restored in 1993-94 by John Canonico, Conservator, Department of Objects Conservation, Metropolitan Museum. Damaged shelves in the upper compartment have not been replaced.[8] The accession number of the related cabinet is 05.22.1. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3610180 Small desk with folding top (bureau brisé). Culture: French, Paris. Designer: Designed and possibly engraved by Jean Berain (French, Saint-Mihiel 1640-1711 Paris) (1638/9-1711). Dimensions: 30 5/16 x 41 3/4 x 23 3/8 in. (77 x 106 x 59.4cm). Maker: Marquetry by Alexandre-Jean Oppenordt (Dutch, 1639-1715, active France). Date: ca. 1685.With a folding top that lifts up to reveal a narrow writing surface, this desk is known in French as a bureau brisé ( literally, "broken desk"). Introduced about 1669, this type of writing table remained fashionable until the early years of the eighteenth century, when it was replaced by the more practical, flat-topped bureau plat. The Museum's desk was commissioned with another almost identical example or Louis XIV's Petit Cabinet, a small private room in the north wing of the Château de Versailles, and is one of the few extant pieces of furniture made for the personal use of the Sun King.The exterior is embellished with marquetry of tortoiseshell and engraved brass, known as Boulle work, after the French royal cabinetmaker André-Charles Boulle (1642-1732), who was a true master of the technique. A thin sheet of red-tinted tortoiseshell was laid atop a thin sheet of brass, and an intricate pattern was cut through both layers before they were separated. The Museum's desk received the more beautiful version of the decoration (so-called première partie), where the tortoiseshell forms the ground enriched with inlays of cutout brass. The pendant desk was veneered with the "leftover" materials, consisting of a brass ground inlaid with cutout tortoiseshell (contre partie). Without wasting any of the exotic tortoiseshell or the metal, it was thus possible to produce an identical pair, with the distinction that the decoration of the one desk was the exact reverse of the other. Jean Bérain was responsible for the design of the resplendent marquetry, which was executed by the Dutch-born cabinetmaker Alexandre-Jean Oppenordt, who on July 25, 1685, was paid 240 livres for his work.Richly adorned with royal symbols, strapwork, and acanthus scrolls, the top of the bureau brisé shows in the center a sunburst--symbol of Apollo, the sun god, to whom Louis XIV likened himself--a crown, and a crossed-L monogram. Openwork fleurs-de-lis (symbols of the French monarchy) inscribed with smaller crossed-L monograms embellish the corners. The hinged sections that allow the top to open are straddled by two lyres, the musical instrument of Apollo.This very specific marquetry decoration and the overall measurements make it possible to identify this writing desk and its mate in a royal inventory drawn up in 1718 after Louis's death. Many pieces of furniture and furnishings made for the French court were sold during the French Revolution but this small writing desk and its pair had already left the royal collections during the ancien régime. Considered old-fashioned by the middle of the eighteenth century, they were auctioned off in July 1751 as two lots and appear to have led separate existences ever since. The Museum's bureau brisé was acquired by the cabinetmaker and furniture dealer Gilles Joubert (1689-1775) for 40 livres. Its subsequent history remains largely a mystery.[Daniëlle Kisluk-Grosheide, 2010]. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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dpa7365803 (dpa) - Two Iraqi prisoners sit in the shade on the ground surrounded by barbwire near An Nu Maniyah 90 kilometres south of Baghdad, Iraq, 3 April 2003. The US Marines prepare for the decisive advance on Baghdad after days of rest. The first spearheads of US troops have allegedly reached the outskirts of Baghdad.
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dpa20138047 The picture by Soviet photographer Yevgeny Khaldei shows Hermann Göring, guarded by two US military policemen during the Nuremberg Trials in 1946.Photo: Yevgeny Khaldei.
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akg7794673 Armchair, Empire model, with cane back and seat, painted red and gilded and heightened with gold, Two armchairs (A and B) of a tropical wood (djati?), Painted red, parts gilded and heightened with gold, the back and the loose seat frame covered with reeds. Empire model with straight back, slightly arched back, widening seat with curved sides, baluster-shaped front legs and arm struts, curved, spherical-ended arms and dense cheeks with sunken fields, which are repeated below the seat in mirror image and in smaller format. Sculpted with acanthus and palmet gold motifs. Mutual differences in proportions and details. On both labels: 'This chair once stood in Batavia Castle. He was later used by the Supreme Court of the Dutch Indies Wagener. Dutch East Indies, first quarter of the 19th century, Batavia, Indonesia, c. 1800 - c. 1825, wood (plant material), h 102 cm × w 63 cm × d 55 cm h 48 cm × w 50.5 cm × d 46 cm.
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akg7783484 Napkin with the arms of Cornelis Hop, Napkin of linen damask with the arms of Cornelis Hop. Midfield: symmetrical pattern of multifaceted volute drinks with thickened blocks at the nodes. In between a lying oval shield with a coat of arms of Cornelis Hop (1685-1762), ambassador to the court of King Louis XV of France: quartered, 1 and 4 headed bird standing on ball (the bird of 1 surrounded, the bird of 4 surrounded), 2 and three two turned wings. Heart shield divided: 1 a crossbar, 2 on the right a five-pointed star, on the left a used waxman. The shield covered with five-leaf crown. Shieldholders: a turned away eagle on the right, a turned away lion on the left. Borders: weapon trophies. Corners: a round axis. Around block edge, Cornelis Hop (II), anonymous, Southern Netherlands, c. 1700 - c. 1724, linen (material), damask, w 113 cm × h 90 cm.
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alb2070175 Pedro Berruguete / 'Saint Dominic Guzmán presiding over an Auto-da-fe', 1493-1499, Spanish School, Oil on panel, 154 cm x 92 cm, P00618. Museum: MUSEO DEL PRADO, MADRID, SPAIN.
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alb4103607 Triptych with Virgin and Child with Saints (center), male Donor with Saint Martin (left, inner wing), female Donor with Saint Cunera (right, inner wing), and the Annunciation (outer wings). Dating: c. 1500 - c. 1510. Measurements: support/centre panel: h 87.1 cm (centre panel) × w 69.2 cm (centre panel); support/left wing: h 86.5 cm (left wing) × w 31.5 cm (left wing); support/right wing: h 86.5 cm (right wing) × w 31.5 cm (right wing). Museum: Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam. Author: Master of Delft.
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dpa10423095 Employee at 'Segway Tour Munich', Juliane Dittrich rides on a segway at Garden Court (Hofgarten) in Munich, Germany, 13 August 2007. The two-wheeled, self-balancing transportation device is permitted to be used in road traffic due to an exceptional permission as of 13 August. 'Segway Tour Munich' intends to offer specialised segway-tourist tours. Photo: Tobias Hase.
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dpa10423079 Manager of 'Segway Tour Munich', Andre Zeitsch, and his employee Juliane Dittrich both stand on segways at Garden Court (Hofgarten) in Munich, Germany, 13 August 2007. The two-wheeled, self-balancing transportation device is permitted to be used in road traffic due to an exceptional permission as of 13 August. Zeitsch intends to offer specialised segway-tourist tours. Photo: Tobias Hase.
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alb4443481 Woman on a cart is mocked XCII. On seeing a whore, put on a cart by the court, and mocked by everyone (title on object), a lady of light morals on a cart. Children pick up stones and point at her. Two figures on the left. Pent from a book in which 36 prints with phrases. Print used in: F. van Hoogstraten, The school of the world, 1682, whore, prostitute, mocking, insulting, teasing, (farm) wagon, freight wagon, cart, Arnold Houbraken, Northern Netherlands, paper, letterpress printing, h 70 mm × w 82 mm h 158 mm × w 96 mm.
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akg1972236 Josephine Baker; Singer and revue dancer; St. Louis (Miss.) 3.6.1906 - Paris, 12.4.1975. Château des Milandes (Dordogne): Josephine Baker with two girls of her "rainbow family" (children of different skin colors adopted by her and her husband Jo Bouillon) in the courtyard on the seesaw. Photo, 1966. Copyright: For editorial use only.
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akg1972262 Josephine Baker; Singer and revue dancer; St. Louis (Miss.) 3.6.1906 - Paris, 12.4.1975. Château des Milandes (Dordogne): Josephine Baker (left) with two girls of her "rainbow family" (children of different skin color, adopted by her and her husband Jo Bouillon) and an educator in the courtyard. Photo, 1966. Copyright: For editorial use only.
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akg1972239 Josephine Baker; Singer and revue dancer; St. Louis (Miss.) 3.6.1906 - Paris, 12.4.1975. Château des Milandes (Dordogne): Josephine Baker (left) with two girls of her "rainbow family" (children of different skin color, adopted by her and her husband Jo Bouillon) and an educator in the courtyard. Photo, 1966. Copyright: For editorial use only.
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alb9517230 Imperial Ink Cake, 1736-1795, Wang Chin-shen, Chinese, active 18th century, 15/16 x 7 1/4 in. (2.38 x 18.42 cm), Colors, gold and animal adhesive, China, 18th century, This rare and unusual imperial ink cake has the form and color of a shallow carved lacquer dish. Red ink was used in official court transcripts for punctuation, corrections, and imperial inscriptions. This specially commissioned cake was likely made to commemorate an important court event. The central medallion is finely worked with a pair of gilt dragons flanking a two-character inscription that reads 'imperially bestowed.' The cavetto bears a long seal-script inscription. The reverse is decorated with archaistic dragons and flowing pearls in low relief as well as a gilt nine-character mark that reads 'Made by Wang Chin-sheng in the Chin-lung period of the great Ch'ing dynasty.'.
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alb9523819 Tea Bowl (yan-kou wan), 12th-13th century, 2 15/16 x 5 1/4 in. (7.5 x 13.34 cm), Chien ware Dark-brown stoneware with dark-brown glaze and iron oxide markings, China, 12th-13th century, Highly respected items of the court during the reign of Emperor Hui Zong (r. 1101-1125), Jian ware tea bowls from Kiangsu province came in two sizes; this classic example can be considered the larger variety. Appearing bluish black, a deep brown glaze covers the bowl stopping in a thick welt above the foot. Because the molten glaze crawled downward in firing, the lip is left virtually unglazed. In the upper portions, a dense pattern of russet streaks known as 'hare's-fur' extend from the lip toward the vessel floor, both inside and outside the deep bowl. Northern Song (960-1127) texts suggest that these distinctly glazed bowls were used to prepare the white whipped tea then in vogue.
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alb9512890 The two right caryatids from the Vierschaar of the Stadhuis on the Dam, Hubert Quellinus, after Artus Quellinus (I), 1655 - 1665, The two right caryatids from the Vierschaar in the Stadhuis on the Dam in Amsterdam. They symbolize guilt and repentance. The Vierschaar was a public court of justice used by sheriff and aldermen only to pronounce death sentences. Marked at the bottom center: D (crossed out). Numbering added by hand at bottom right: XXVIII., print maker: Hubert Quellinus, Hubert Quellinus, Artus Quellinus (I), (mentioned on object), Amsterdam, 1655 - 1665, paper, etching, engraving, pen, h 282 mm × w 189 mm.
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alb9497779 Cowherd women seek the God Krishna in the forest, 1520-1540, 7 x 9 1/4 in. (17.78 x 23.5 cm) (sheet), Opaque watercolors on paper, India, 16th century, This painting comes from the first illustrated series of the Bhagavata Purana (Ancient Story of the Blessed One), a text composed in the 800s1000s ce that chronicles the life story of Lord Krishna. Here, the artist inventively translates verse to image, with two registers of lovesick gopis (cowherd wives) chasing the call of Krishnas flute in a fantastical moonlit forest. The bold use of color, exaggerated gestures, and bristling costumes marks the crystallization of a pre-Mughal style. Inherited from earlier traditions, this visual language would influence the Indian court painting to follow.
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alb9484774 The two right caryatids from the Vierschaar of the City Hall on Dam Square, Hubert Quellinus, after Artus Quellinus (I), 1719 - 1783, The two right caryatids from the Vierschaar in the City Hall on Dam Square in Amsterdam. They symbolize guilt and repentance. The Vierschaar was a public court of justice used by sheriff and aldermen only to pronounce death sentences. Numbered at lower right: XXVIII., print maker: Hubert Quellinus, Hubert Quellinus, Artus Quellinus (I), (mentioned on object), Amsterdam, 1655 and/or 1719 - 1783, paper, etching, engraving, h 282 mm × w 189 mm.
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alb9481217 The two left caryatids from the Vierschaar of the Stadhuis on Dam, Hubert Quellinus, after Artus Quellinus (I), 1655 - 1665, The two left caryatids from the Vierschaar in the Stadhuis on Dam in Amsterdam. They symbolize guilt and repentance. The Vierschaar was a public court of justice used by sheriff and aldermen only to pronounce death sentences. Marked at the bottom center: D (crossed out). Numbering added by hand at bottom right: XXVII., print maker: Hubert Quellinus, Hubert Quellinus, Artus Quellinus (I), (mentioned on object), Amsterdam, 1655 - 1665, paper, etching, engraving, pen, h 288 mm × w 191 mm.
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alb9460043 Page from the Manafi al-Hayavan, 14th century, 9 x 6 3/4 in. (22.86 x 17.15 cm) (sheet), Ink and color on paper, Iran, 14th century, This folio depicting two stags comes from a dispersed copy of a medical text titled Manafi al-Hayavan (On the Uses Derived from Animals); a Christian doctor who was a court physician to the Abbasid caliph in Baghdad wrote the original in Arabic in a.d. 941. In the late thirteenth century, the Mongol ruler of Iran and Iraq, Ghazan Khan, ordered a copy of the Manafi to be translated into Persian. Because this leaf was copied from that volume shortly after the Mongol conquest of Persia, there is a strong Chinese influence in the stylized clouds above the stags and in the treatment of the flowers.
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alb9457462 Powder flask, c. 1590, 11 3/4 in. (29.85 cm), Ivory with opaque color and silver fittings, India, Mughal dynasty (1526-1857), Ivory gunpowder flasks were popular luxury items in early modern South Asia (14001830). Meant to be used during hunting, a favorite pastime of the elite, these flasks were often carved with intertwining animals. Both ends terminate in leaping antelope heads, one showing a cheetah chasing a motley group of rabbits and antelopes (in some South Asian courts, cheetahs were raised in captivity and trained to hunt). The body of the flask depicts a cheetah and two hounds pursuing fish, birds, dogs, deer, and rabbits, with small touches of paint highlighting the animals eyes. Composite animals and scenes of predators pursuing prey were common subjects in painting, textiles, and decorative arts of the time.
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alb9439909 Altar Frontal, early 18th century, L.36-7/8 x W.30-3/8 in., silk, satin, China, 18th century, Decorative textile panels like this were used to enliven altars in homes and temples during festive occasions. Most frontals are composed of two sections: a valance (upper section) and a main register, which are decorated with symbols appropriate to the use of the altar. Formal frontals like this one containing imperial dragon imagery were probably used on the ancestral altar tables of the nobility or within Confucian and Buddhist temples under court patronage.
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alb9438372 Relief with the verdict of Solomon in the Vierschaar of the City Hall on Dam Square in Amsterdam. King Solomon, from his throne, points with his staff at a kneeling woman with a baby, while an executioner is about to divide the child in two. Solomon had given this order to the executioner after two women came to him who both claimed the motherhood of a child. When the executioner raised his sword, the real mother wanted to give up the child, so Solomon knew who the real mother was. The Vierschaar was a public court that was only used by sheriff and aldermen to pronounce death sentences. Below the scene two columns with three lines of Latin text each. Marked at the bottom in the middle: A., Relief with the judgment of Solomon in the Square of the Town Hall on Dam Square., print maker: Hubert Quellinus, (mentioned on object), Hubert Quellinus, Artus Quellinus (I), (mentioned on object), Amsterdam, 1655 - 1665, paper, etching, engraving, h 344 mm × w 461 mm.
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alb9427566 Sculpture group with the Amsterdam City Virgin, river gods and inaugural text in the Vierschaar of the City Hall on Dam Square, Hubert Quellinus, after Artus Quellinus (I), 1719 - 1783, Sculpture group on the northern wall of the Vierschaar in the City Hall on Dam Square in Amsterdam. In the center, the Amsterdam City Virgin on a pedestal. On her head the imperial crown and an eagle, in her hands the coat of arms of the city and a caduceus, at her feet two lions. To her left are the arms of Gebrand Pancras (above) and Sybrant Valckenier (below); to her right are the arms of Jacob de Graeff (above) and Pieter Schaep (below). These four Amsterdam regents, all sons or cousins of the sitting mayors from the year 1648, laid the first stone of the city hall in that same year. On the pedestal the inaugural text referring to the Treaty of Munster and the laying of the foundation stone. To the left of the plinth is the river god (personification) of the IJ River, including a ship's crown, fishing net, anchor and rudder. To the right is the river god (personification) of the Amstel, including an oar, grappling hook, water plants and a beaver - which, as a dam-building animal, refers to the dam across the Amstel to which the city owes its name. The Vierschaar was a public court of justice that was only used by the sheriff and aldermen to pronounce death sentences. Numbered bottom right: XXIV., print maker: Hubert Quellinus, (mentioned on object), Hubert Quellinus, Artus Quellinus (I), (mentioned on object), Amsterdam, 1655 and/or 1719 - 1783, paper, etching, engraving, h 313 mm × w 430 mm.
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alb9431922 The two left caryatids from the Vierschaar of the Stadhuis on the Dam, Hubert Quellinus, after Artus Quellinus (I), 1719 - 1783, The two left caryatids from the Vierschaar in the Stadhuis on the Dam in Amsterdam. They symbolize guilt and repentance. The Vierschaar was a public court of justice used by sheriff and aldermen only to pronounce death sentences. Numbered at lower right: XXVII., print maker: Hubert Quellinus, Hubert Quellinus, Artus Quellinus (I), (mentioned on object), Amsterdam, 1655 and/or 1719 - 1783, paper, etching, engraving, h 288 mm × w 191 mm.
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alb3612162 The Lovers. Artist: Painting by Riza-yi `Abbasi (Persian, ca. 1565-1635). Dimensions: Painting: H. 6 7/8 in. (17.5 cm) W. 4 3/8 in. (11.1 cm)Page: H. 7 1/2 in. (19.1 cm)W. 4 15/16 in. (12.5 cm)Mat: H. 19 1/4 in. (48.9 cm)W. 14 1/4 in. (36.2 cm). Date: dated A.H. 1039/ A.D. 1630.The artist Riza-yi 'Abbasi revolutionized Persian painting and drawing with his inventive use of calligraphic line and unusual palette. He painted The Lovers toward the end of a long, successful career at the Safavid court. The subject of a couple entwined reflects a newly relaxed attitude to sensuality introduced in the reign of Shah Safi (r. 1629-42). Here the figures are inextricably bound together, merged volumes confined within one outline. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3629325 Searchlight on Harbor Entrance, Santiago de Cuba. Artist: Winslow Homer (American, Boston, Massachusetts 1836-1910 Prouts Neck, Maine). Dimensions: 30 1/2 x 50 1/2 in. (77.5 x 128.3 cm). Date: 1901.In September 1901 a court of inquiry was convened to determine which of two commanders deserved credit for America's decisive victory in the Battle of Santiago de Cuba, during the Spanish-American-Cuban War of 1898. In response to the newsworthy event, Homer painted this image of Castillo de San Pedro de la Roca, known as Morro Castle, with the aid of recent press accounts and drawings he had made on a visit to the island in early 1885. Homer's emphasis on the powerful searchlight, which had been used in the blockade of the Spanish fleet, suggests his awareness of the military importance of electricity during the war as well as its significance as a symbol of modernity. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3605912 Relief panel. Culture: Assyrian. Dimensions: H. 92 1/4 x W. 95 1/2 x D. 4 1/4 in. (234.3 x 242.6 x 10.8 cm). Date: ca. 883-859 B.C..This relief, from the palace of the Assyrian king Ashurnasirpal II (r. ca. 883-859 B.C.), depicts a supernatural protective figure and a mortal Assyrian courtier. The two larger-than-life-sized figures are carved in low relief. This panel joins a second relief that shows the king and a second courtier. Together, the two panels show the king flanked by his human courtiers. The winged figure here formed part of a similar neighboring scene, this time with the king flanked by divine protectors.The winged human-headed figure wears a horned crown - a traditional Mesopotamian marker of divine status - and bracelets adorned with rosettes, as well as armbands, a necklace of beads, and large pendant earrings. He wears a tunic with long tassels and a fringed shawl, emerging from which at chest level can be seen the decorated handles of two knives. Embroidery on the clothes is represented by fine incised patterns of stylized plant imagery at the ends of the sleeves and near the fringe of the shawl. The exposed lower leg with exaggerated musculature is seen in many Assyrian and Babylonian depictions of divine and heroic figures. The figure holds a small bucket in his left hand, and in his right an object resembling a pine-cone. This cone, called by the Assyrians a "purifier," seems to have been used to sprinkle holy water from the bucket, and may have had a symbolic association with the artificial fertilization of date-palm trees. The bucket itself is incised with the image two miniature winged figures performing the same act, not toward the king but toward a central 'sacred tree' and the winged disk associated with Assyria's chief god Ashur.The second figure on the relief is human, and his beardless image indicates that he is probably a eunuch. He is richly dressed, with jewelry including rosette bracelets, armbands, a collar of beads, probably of semiprecious stone with gold spacers, pendant earrings, and a crescent-shaped pectoral. He carries multiple weapons: a bow, a quiver filled with arrows, a mace with a rosette-head, and a sword whose scabbard ends in the bodies of two lions. With the possible exception of the sword, these weapons are not his own but belong to the king. The courtier is shown as an arms-bearer, and in this sense the king's servant, but the position was one of symbolic authority, signifying closeness to the king, and in reality the figure depicted was probably one of the most senior figures in Ashurnasirpal's court. A distinctive feature of the Northwest Palace is the so-called Standard Inscription that ran across the middle of every relief, often cutting across the imagery. The inscription, carved in cuneiform script and written in the Assyrian dialect of the Akkadian language, lists the achievements of Ashurnasirpal II (r. 883-859 B.C.), the builder of the palace. After giving his ancestry and royal titles, the Standard Inscription describes Ashurnasirpal's successful military campaigns to east and west and his building works at Nimrud, most importantly the construction of the palace itself. The inscription is thought to have had a magical function, contributing to the divine protection of the king and the palace. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3674973 Necklace. Culture: American. Dimensions: Length: 15 inches. Maker: Dreicer & Co. (American, New York, 1868-1927). Date: ca. 1905.Designed as an openwork cascade of diamonds and pearls, this superb necklace is a masterwork by Dreicer & Company, considered one of the world's finest jewelers from the late nineteenth century until the 1920s. Founders Jacob Dreicer and his wife, Gittel, immigrated to New York from Russia in 1866, bringing with them an extensive knowledge of precious gemstones. Their son Michael would later become a leading expert on natural pearls. Turn-of-the-century jewelers rejected heavy Victorian designs, following instead one of two concurrent trends: the avant-garde Art Nouveau and Arts and Crafts styles or, as seen here, the traditional fashions of elite society, industrialists and bankers. The cool elegance of this necklace epitomizes the garland style popular in Edwardian England and Bell Époque France. Although Dreicer & Company's designs evoke eighteenth-century court styles, their execution relied on state-of-the-art technology and advanced use of platinum. The firm maintained a sumptuous shop at 560 Fifth Avenue, with branches in Chicago and Palm Beach. In its elegant showroom, modeled after a French salon, tea was served each afternoon to patrons such as the actress Sarah Bernhardt, the dowager Mrs. Astor, First Lady Ida McKinley, and Queen Elisabeth of Belgium. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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akg8334868 Ireland, Co. Kerry, Dingle Peninsula: walled court in front of two beehive huts with no roofs at National Monument Caher Conor (irish: Cathair na gConchuireach; also: "Fahan Beehive Huts"), built in antique times, in use until 1200 AD; Caher Conor, also Caherconnor, is located on the southern slopes of Mount Eagle above Dingle Bay and the Atlantic and can easily be reached via the 46 km long touristic Slea Head Drive. It is directly at the road between the townlands of Glanfahan and Fahan. Fahan is a spectacular archeological site with more than 3000 artefacts found and several architectonic structures, dating even back to iron age and bronze age times. There are many stone forts and clochauns, also known as beehive huts (German: Bienenkorbhütten). The walled enclosure Caher Caher has three 3 clochauns.Only one has still the original roof and is totally covered. As well, this beehive hut has still its original entrance. Caher Conor has the best preserved beehive huts in Ireland.
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alb3661790 Cuneiform tablet: record of a lawsuit. Culture: Old Assyrian Trading Colony. Dimensions: H. 6 5/8 in. (16.8 cm). Date: ca. 20th-19th century B.C..Kültepe, the ancient city of Kanesh, was a powerful and cosmopolitan city located in northern Cappadocia in central Anatolia. During the early second millennium B.C., it became part of the network of trading settlements established across the region by merchants from Ashur (in Assyria in northern Mesopotamia). Travelling long distances by donkey caravan, and often living separately from their families, these merchants traded vast quantities of tin and textiles for gold and silver in addition to controlling the copper trade within Anatolia itself. Although the merchants adopted many aspects of local Anatolian life, they brought with them Mesopotamian tools used to record transactions: cuneiform writing, clay tablets and envelopes, and cylinder seals. Using a simplified version of the elaborate cuneiform writing system, merchants tracked loans as well as business deals and disputes, and sent letters to families and business partners back in Ashur. These texts also provide information about the greater political history of Ashur and the Anatolian city-states as well as details about the daily life of Assyrians and Anatolians who not only worked side-by-side, but also married and had children together. At Kültepe, thousands of these texts stored in household archives were preserved when fire destroyed the city in ca. 1836 B.C. and provide a glimpse into the complex and sophisticated commercial and social interactions that took place in the Near East during the beginning of the second millennium B.C.This tablet, the longest extant Old Assyrian legal text, represents one such document and records court testimony describing a dispute between two merchants. This testimony was delivered before witnesses representing the authority of the merchant government in Kanesh as well as the dagger of the god Ashur. In the text, Suen-nada and Ennum-Ashur accuse each other of stealing the valuable contents of a private archive which they both claim to own. Items within the archive include cylinder seals, tablets belonging to various named merchants, and tablets belonging to strangers that were deposited there for safe keeping. As undisturbed tablet storerooms are extremely rare, this text is important for reconstructing the contents of a sealed archive. Ennum-Assur calls for the case to be moved to Ashur to be tried in front of the city assembly and king, but unfortunately the verdict of the court is unknown. The tablet was contained in a clay envelope or case also in The Metropolitan's collection. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb1472896 The September 11th memorial. 2003. Monument dedicated to all Texans who died during the terrorist attacks. Designed by OÕConnell, Robertson and Associates of Austin. With two steel columns from Ground Zero. Detail. Texas State Cemetery. Austin. United States.
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alb1462041 The September 11th memorial. 2003. Monument dedicated to all Texans who died during the terrorist attacks. Designed by OÕConnell, Robertson and Associates of Austin. With two steel columns from Ground Zero. Texas State Cemetery. Austin. United States.
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alb3503969 Jousting Armor (Rennzeug), ca. 1580–90, probably Dresden or Annaberg, German, probably Dresden or Annaberg, Steel, leather, paint, Wt. 65 lb. 2 oz. (29.6 kg), Armor for Man-3/4 Armor, This armor was intended for use in the Scharfrennen, a joust fought in an open field by two contestants mounted on horses and armed with relatively sharp lances. The sport remained popular at the court of the prince-electors of Saxony long after it had gone out of fashion elsewhere in Europe.
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alb3501563 Jousting Armor (Rennzeug), ca. 1580–90, Dresden or Annaberg, German, probably Dresden or Annaberg, Steel, copper alloy, leather, Wt. 91 lb. 6 oz. (41.45 kg), Armor for Man, This armor was intended for use in the Scharfrennen, a joust fought in an open field by two contestants mounted on horses and armed with relatively sharp lances. The sport remained popular at the court of the prince-electors of Saxony long after it had gone out of fashion elsewhere in Europe.
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alb3654799 Christ at the Column. Artist: Delli brothers (Florentine, active Spain, 1430s-60s). Dimensions: sheet: 15 7/8 x 11 15/16 in. (40.3 x 30.4 cm)mount: 16 3/8 x 12 5/16 in. (41.6 x 31.3 cm). Date: ca. 1440-70.Dating from around 1440-70, this large, well preserved, delicately rendered drawing on fine vellum is of great rarity and historical significance. The drawing embodies the unique mixture of Italian and Spanish elements that prominently defined painting in early to mid-15th century Spain, particularly in the regions of Castilla and Leon. It was produced in Spain, in the workshop of the Delli brothers (Dello Delli, Niccolò Delli, and Sansone Delli), Florentine artists who established themselves in the region of Salamanca and Avila in Spain, between 1433 and 1445. Their most famous work is the monumental main altarpiece (retablo mayor) of the Old Cathedral of Salamanca, from 1437-45. Born in Florence around 1403, the eldest brother, Dello Delli, who was called "Daniel Florentino" in Spain, was probably the leader of the workshop, and is the most famous of the brothers, as he was the subject of a biography by the eminent historian Giorgio Vasari in 1550 and 1568. As the documents tell, Dello arrived in Spain around 1433, and achieved great renown in his day for his mastery of geometry, pictorial perspective, and architecture, meriting for these reasons a knighthood from the Spanish king, Juan II of Castilla, and commissions at the court of the king of Naples, Alfonso I of Aragón, in 1446. The Florentine republic also recognized Dello's knighthood in 1446. However, it is the middle brother, Niccolò, who is the best-documented member of the team in terms of actual, identifiable works. He became known as "Nicolás Florentino," and was born around 1413. Niccolò was contracted in 1445 to produce the prestigious fresco in the apse, above the newly completed monumental altarpiece (retablo), of the Old Cathedral of Salamanca; he also restored paintings in the Cathedral of Valencia in 1469, and died in 1471 in that city. The youngest brother, Sansone, born in 1416, was closely dependent on Dello in his early years, and is documented to have been in practice with Niccolò in the environs of Salamanca and Avila, from 1445 to 1466.The drawing appears to have been done in two separate campaigns by closely related hands in the same workshop. The finest portions of the drawing seem to have been drawn first, and very delicately, with pen and golden brown ink. The tonal control of the golden brown ink passages is exquisite. The drawing seems to have then been reworked by a less sensitive hand with pen and nearly black ink; much of the background seems to belong to this second campaign of work. (A similarly "two-handed" intervention characterizes the execution of a number of the painted panels of the Salamanca retablo.) Selective finishing touches of yellow and green color appear to have been added, also at this later stageThe foreground portrays a large devotional image of the flagellated Christ, with hands and feet tied onto a slender column in the center, and flanked by two kneeling donors of a considerably smaller scale. The kneeling donor on the left represents a friar from a mendicant order (possibly Dominican, but this is not certain), and the kneeling, tonsured figure on the right is a high-ranking ecclesiastic, possibly a canon. The figures of Christ and the donors are placed within a steeply foreshortened architectural space much like a chapel, with a small balustrade in the middle ground, and, beyond, a distant view into a hilly landscape with tiny hermit buildings. Three large scrolls with inscribed prayers accompany the figures of the donors.The scroll on the upper left reads: "Pater meus et mater mea deliquerunt me dominus / autem adsumpsit me / gratias tibi ago almiflue Ihesu rex / qui me dignatus es recipere in tuorum numerum / sanctorum animam meam tibi commendo qui es bene/dictus in secula seculorum Amen /." This prayer may be translated as: "My father and my mother have left me, but the Lord has taken me up. I give thanks to you, gracious [or beneficent] Jesus, King, who deigned to receive me into the number of your saints, I commend my soul to you who are blessed forever and ever, Amen." The scroll on the upper right states: "Domine deus ostende in me misericordiam / tuam et protege me et confirma me in ve/ritate tua et doce me facere voluntatem / tuam quia deus meus es tu." That is: "Lord God show to me your mercy and protect me and confirm me in your truth and teach me to do your will, because you are my God." The scroll at the bottom reads: "Nisi enim ille fuisset missus / nemo nostrum / ab iniquitate fuisset dimissus." That is: "For if he had not been sent, none of us would have been released from sin." Spanish art before 1500 was largely shaped by the contributions of foreign artists. The present sheet appears to be the only extant 15th century drawing by an Italian artist active in Spain that is currently known. Extremely few drawings from before 1500 of comparable importance to the history of Spanish art are extant, and these are mostly by Northern artists. Among these known examples, none appears to combine the quality, condition, and size of this work. The Museum's drawing broadly reflects the International Gothic style that was practiced by Italian artists from 1430 to 1450. This is most evident in the delicately stippled application of the pigments with the brush in the modeling, in the conception of the figure of Christ with elegantly attenuated bodily and facial proportions, and in the steeply foreshortened architectural space with landscape in roving perspective. Yet the drawing also incorporates elements that are more typically Spanish, indebted to the strong Netherlandish tradition of painting that predominated in Spain between 1430 and 1500. This Northern aspect is especially evident in the drapery style of the donors with broken-up, angular folds, in the curlicues design of the inscribed scrolls, and in the use of a pronounced hieratic scale in the figures, with an iconic, large Christ in the center and two minute kneeling donors on the sides. The 1445 contract for the apse fresco of the Old Cathedral of Salamanca, awarded to Niccolò Delli (Nicolás Florentino), stipulates repeatedly that the painter was to base his work for the frescoes on "drawings done on vellum," and that the cathedral administrators had previously approved. It is therefore reasonable to suppose that the present drawing, done on vellum, may have first been conceived of to serve a similar purpose: as a demonstration piece, of work to be carried out. The drawing may have then been reworked in the studio, with finishing touches in color, for a patron to use as a devotional image in its own right. The imagery of the flagellated Christ (originating loosely in the passage from Matthew 27:26-29) especially abounds in Spanish art, in works produced for both public and private devotion, and served religious practitioners as a vivid reminder in contemplating acts of suffering, self-imposed mortification, and contrition. As seen in the present drawing, the monumental motif of Christ elaborately tied to the column - both hands and feet - may have been especially relevant to confraternity practice. The motif of Christ tied, both hands and feet, is very rarely found in Italian art, but is quite common in the Northern traditions that influenced Spanish painting. The Confraternities of the Flagellants flourished in Spain in particular numbers, and in Salamanca this Medieval institution, the "Cofradía de Jesús Flagelado," still exists today. The prayer that is inscribed on the upper left scroll above the kneeling friar is part of the "office of the dead" in many books of hours of the period. The image seen in the proposed drawing may also therefore be pertinent in a funerary context. (Carmen C. Bambach; 2004). Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3680849 The Battle of Arcul. Artist: after Giuseppe Castiglione (Italian, Milan 1688-1766 Beijing); (direxit) Charles Nicolas Cochin II (French, Paris 1715-1790 Paris); Benoit Louis Prevost (French, 1747-ca. 1804). Dimensions: Sheet: 25 13/16 × 39 11/16 in. (65.5 × 100.8 cm)Plate: 22 13/16 × 36 15/16 in. (58 × 93.8 cm). Series/Portfolio: The Conquests of the Emperor of China(Les Conquêtes de l'Empereur de la Chine). Date: 1767-74.This print shows the Battle of Arcul. The Khoja, after having lost the battle of Qos-qulaq, fled to Arcul and were once again defeated by Chinese troops, mostly cavalry, who are shown here routing the enemy.Part of a set of sixteen, "The Battle of Arcul" was commissioned by the Qianlong Emperor in 1765 to commemorate Manchu victories (1755-59) over the Eleuths, the Dzungars, and other Central Asian peoples in the present-day region of Xinjiang. Made under the direction of Charles-Nicolas Cochin (1715-1790), the prints, which follow reduced-scale copies of paintings by Jesuit artists working in Beijing, were etched and engraved in France from 1767 to 1774 by the finest printmakers at the court of Louis XV. The Chinese merchants of Canton (present-day Guangzhou) paid for the copper plates and two hundred sets of prints to be delivered to China, with only a few sets retained in Paris.The prints exemplify the fusion of Eastern and Western representational styles fostered within the Qing imperial painting academy. The European technique of chiaroscuro-the modeling of forms through the use of light and shading-has been visibly tempered, as has the use of one-point perspective. Instead, the scenes present panoramic views and strongly up-tilt ground planes. At the same time, howevery, they reflect European preferences for anatomical accuracy, a single light source, and the mathematically correct reduction of scale to create the illusion of recession. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3680233 The Battle of Tonguzluq. Artist: Augustin de Saint-Aubin (French, Paris 1736-1807 Paris); after Giuseppe Castiglione (Italian, Milan 1688-1766 Beijing); (direxit) Charles Nicolas Cochin II (French, Paris 1715-1790 Paris). Dimensions: Sheet: 39 5/8 × 25 13/16 in. (100.7 × 65.5 cm)Plate: 37 × 22 3/4 in. (94 × 57.8 cm). Series/Portfolio: The Conquests of the Emperor of China(Les Conquêtes de l'Empereur de la Chine). Date: 1773.This print depicts the 1758 Battle of Tonguzluq with Qing soldiers firing cannons and using guns and arrows to attack the enemy within a fortified encampement filled with tents and yurts; outside the encampement, Qing soldiers set fire to enemy turrets and take prisoners.Part of a set of sixteen, "The Battle of Tonguzluq" was commissioned by the Qianlong Emperor in 1765 to commemorate Manchu victories (1755-59) over the Eleuths, the Dzungars, and other Central Asian peoples in the present-day region of Xinjiang. Made under the direction of Charles-Nicolas Cochin (1715-1790), the prints, which follow reduced-scale copies of paintings by Jesuit artists working in Beijing, were etched and engraved in France from 1767 to 1774 by the finest printmakers at the court of Louis XV. The Chinese merchants of Canton (present-day Guangzhou) paid for the copper plates and two hundred sets of prints to be delivered to China, with only a few sets retained in Paris.The prints exemplify the fusion of Eastern and Western representational styles fostered within the Qing imperial painting academy. The European technique of chiaroscuro-the modeling of forms through the use of light and shading-has been visibly tempered, as has the use of one-point perspective. Instead, the scenes present panoramic views and strongly up-tilt ground planes. At the same time, howevery, they reflect European preferences for anatomical accuracy, a single light source, and the mathematically correct reduction of scale to create the illusion of recession. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3684127 The Combat of Khurungui. Artist: (direxit) Charles Nicolas Cochin II (French, Paris 1715-1790 Paris); after Giovanni Damasceno Salusti (1727-1781); Jacques Aliamet (French, Abbeville 1726-1788 Paris). Dimensions: Sheet: 39 11/16 × 25 11/16 in. (100.8 × 65.3 cm)Plate: 22 15/16 × 36 9/16 in. (58.2 × 92.8 cm). Series/Portfolio: The Conquests of the Emperor of China(Les Conquêtes de l'Empereur de la Chine). Date: 1774.This print depicts the 1758 Combat of Khurungui, showing Chinese troops led by Zhaohui and his lieutenants attacking Amursana's supporters who, after their defeat at Khorgos, went to Mount Khurungui, located north of the river Ili. Part of a set of sixteen, "The Combat of Khurungui" was commissioned by the Qianlong Emperor in 1765 to commemorate Manchu victories (1755-59) over the Eleuths, the Dzungars, and other Central Asian peoples in the present-day region of Xinjiang. Made under the direction of Charles-Nicolas Cochin (1715-1790), the prints, which follow reduced-scale copies of paintings by Jesuit artists working in Beijing, were etched and engraved in France from 1767 to 1774 by the finest printmakers at the court of Louis XV. The Chinese merchants of Canton (present-day Guangzhou) paid for the copper plates and two hundred sets of prints to be delivered to China, with only a few sets retained in Paris.The prints exemplify the fusion of Eastern and Western representational styles fostered within the Qing imperial painting academy. The European technique of chiaroscuro-the modeling of forms through the use of light and shading-has been visibly tempered, as has the use of one-point perspective. Instead, the scenes present panoramic views and strongly up-tilt ground planes. At the same time, howevery, they reflect European preferences for anatomical accuracy, a single light source, and the mathematically correct reduction of scale to create the illusion of recession. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3638203 The Victory of Khorgos. Artist: Jacques Philippe Le Bas (French, Paris 1707-1783 Paris); (direxit) Charles Nicolas Cochin II (French, Paris 1715-1790 Paris); after Jean Denis Attiret (French, 1702-1768). Dimensions: Sheet: 39 5/8 × 25 3/4 in. (100.7 × 65.4 cm)Plate: 36 3/4 × 22 3/8 in. (93.3 × 56.8 cm). Series/Portfolio: The Conquests of the Emperor of China(Les Conquêtes de l'Empereur de la Chine). Date: 1774.This print depicts the 1758 victorious battle of Khorgos with imperial cavalry armed with bows and arrows at left, galloping toward the enemy cavalry at right.Part of a set of sixteen, "The Victory of Khorgos" was commissioned by the Qianlong Emperor in 1765 to commemorate Manchu victories (1755-59) over the Eleuths, the Dzungars, and other Central Asian peoples in the present-day region of Xinjiang. Made under the direction of Charles-Nicolas Cochin (1715-1790), the prints, which follow reduced-scale copies of paintings by Jesuit artists working in Beijing, were etched and engraved in France from 1767 to 1774 by the finest printmakers at the court of Louis XV. The Chinese merchants of Canton (present-day Guangzhou) paid for the copper plates and two hundred sets of prints to be delivered to China, with only a few sets retained in Paris.The prints exemplify the fusion of Eastern and Western representational styles fostered within the Qing imperial painting academy. The European technique of chiaroscuro-the modeling of forms through the use of light and shading-has been visibly tempered, as has the use of one-point perspective. Instead, the scenes present panoramic views and strongly up-tilt ground planes. At the same time, howevery, they reflect European preferences for anatomical accuracy, a single light source, and the mathematically correct reduction of scale to create the illusion of recession. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3639502 The Battle of Qos-qulaq. Artist: after Giuseppe Castiglione (Italian, Milan 1688-1766 Beijing); (direxit) Charles Nicolas Cochin II (French, Paris 1715-1790 Paris); Benoit Louis Prevost (French, 1747-ca. 1804). Dimensions: Sheet: 25 11/16 × 39 5/8 in. (65.2 × 100.7 cm)Plate: 22 5/8 × 36 1/8 in. (57.5 × 91.8 cm). Series/Portfolio: The Conquests of the Emperor of China(Les Conquêtes de l'Empereur de la Chine). Date: 1774.This print shows the 1759 battle of Qos-qulaq during which the Khoja were defeated. Qing officers on horseback instruct their cavalry and archers on horseback chase enemy horsemen.Part of a set of sixteen, "The Battle of Qos-qulaq" was commissioned by the Qianlong Emperor in 1765 to commemorate Manchu victories (1755-59) over the Eleuths, the Dzungars, and other Central Asian peoples in the present-day region of Xinjiang. Made under the direction of Charles-Nicolas Cochin (1715-1790), the prints, which follow reduced-scale copies of paintings by Jesuit artists working in Beijing, were etched and engraved in France from 1767 to 1774 by the finest printmakers at the court of Louis XV. The Chinese merchants of Canton (present-day Guangzhou) paid for the copper plates and two hundred sets of prints to be delivered to China, with only a few sets retained in Paris.The prints exemplify the fusion of Eastern and Western representational styles fostered within the Qing imperial painting academy. The European technique of chiaroscuro-the modeling of forms through the use of light and shading-has been visibly tempered, as has the use of one-point perspective. Instead, the scenes present panoramic views and strongly up-tilt ground planes. At the same time, howevery, they reflect European preferences for anatomical accuracy, a single light source, and the mathematically correct reduction of scale to create the illusion of recession. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA. Author: Benoît Louis Prévost. (direxit) Charles Nicolas Cochin II. After Giuseppe Castiglione.
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alb3629783 The Great Victory of Qurnam. Artist: Augustin de Saint-Aubin (French, Paris 1736-1807 Paris); (direxit) Charles Nicolas Cochin II (French, Paris 1715-1790 Paris); after Giovanni Damasceno Salusti (1727-1781). Dimensions: Sheet: 39 5/8 × 25 13/16 in. (100.7 × 65.5 cm)Plate: 37 1/16 × 22 11/16 in. (94.1 × 57.7 cm). Series/Portfolio: The Conquests of the Emperor of China(Les Conquêtes de l'Empereur de la Chine). Date: 1770.The event shown is the 1759 battle of Qurnam in which Qing troops defeat the enemy at the end of the Qianlong Emperor's East Turkestan campaign.Part of a set of sixteen, "The Great Victory of Qurnam" was commissioned by the Qianlong Emperor in 1765 to commemorate Manchu victories (1755-59) over the Eleuths, the Dzungars, and other Central Asian peoples in the present-day region of Xinjiang. Made under the direction of Charles-Nicolas Cochin (1715-1790), the prints, which follow reduced-scale copies of paintings by Jesuit artists working in Beijing, were etched and engraved in France from 1767 to 1774 by the finest printmakers at the court of Louis XV. The Chinese merchants of Canton (present-day Guangzhou) paid for the copper plates and two hundred sets of prints to be delivered to China, with only a few sets retained in Paris.The prints exemplify the fusion of Eastern and Western representational styles fostered within the Qing imperial painting academy. The European technique of chiaroscuro-the modeling of forms through the use of light and shading-has been visibly tempered, as has the use of one-point perspective. Instead, the scenes present panoramic views and strongly up-tilt ground planes. At the same time, howevery, they reflect European preferences for anatomical accuracy, a single light source, and the mathematically correct reduction of scale to create the illusion of recession. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3645437 Storming the Camp at Mount Gadan. Artist: Jacques Philippe Le Bas (French, Paris 1707-1783 Paris); after Giuseppe Castiglione (Italian, Milan 1688-1766 Beijing); (direxit) Charles Nicolas Cochin II (French, Paris 1715-1790 Paris). Dimensions: Sheet: 25 13/16 × 39 5/8 in. (65.5 × 100.6 cm)Plate: 22 11/16 x 36 13/16 in. (57.6 x 93.5 cm). Series/Portfolio: The Conquests of the Emperor of China(Les Conquêtes de l'Empereur de la Chine). Date: 1769.This print illustrates a successful 1755 attack on an enemy camp near Mount Gadan by Kalmouk Ayusi, a Mongol who entered the service of the Qing.Part of a set of sixteen, "Storming the Campe at Mount Gadan" was commissioned by the Qianlong Emperor in 1765 to commemorate Manchu victories (1755-59) over the Eleuths, the Dzungars, and other Central Asian peoples in the present-day region of Xinjiang. Made under the direction of Charles-Nicolas Cochin (1715-1790), the prints, which follow reduced-scale copies of paintings by Jesuit artists working in Beijing, were etched and engraved in France from 1767 to 1774 by the finest printmakers at the court of Louis XV. The Chinese merchants of Canton (present-day Guangzhou) paid for the copper plates and two hundred sets of prints to be delivered to China, with only a few sets retained in Paris.The prints exemplify the fusion of Eastern and Western representational styles fostered within the Qing imperial painting academy. The European technique of chiaroscuro-the modeling of forms through the use of light and shading-has been visibly tempered, as has the use of one-point perspective. Instead, the scenes present panoramic views and strongly up-tilt ground planes. At the same time, howevery, they reflect European preferences for anatomical accuracy, a single light source, and the mathematically correct reduction of scale to create the illusion of recession. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3667809 The Battle at Oroi-jalatu. Artist: Jacques Philippe Le Bas (French, Paris 1707-1783 Paris); after Giuseppe Castiglione (Italian, Milan 1688-1766 Beijing); (direxit) Charles Nicolas Cochin II (French, Paris 1715-1790 Paris). Dimensions: Sheet: 25 13/16 x 39 5/8 in. (65.5 x 100.6 cm)Plate: 22 1/2 × 36 9/16 in. (57.2 × 92.8 cm). Series/Portfolio: The Conquests of the Emperor of China(Les Conquêtes de l'Empereur de la Chine). Date: 1770.Illustrated here is a daring night raid on a Dzungar camp, conducted in 1756 by the Manchu general Zhaohui (1708-1764). The Dzungars, however, subsequently besieged the Qing forces, forcing them to retreat.Part of a set of sixteen, "The Battle at Oroi-jalatu" was commissioned by the Qianlong Emperor in 1765 to commemorate Manchu victories (1755-59) over the Eleuths, the Dzungars, and other Central Asian peoples in the present-day region of Xinjiang. Made under the direction of Charles-Nicolas Cochin (1715-1790), the prints, which follow reduced-scale copies of paintings by Jesuit artists working in Beijing, were etched and engraved in France from 1767 to 1774 by the finest printmakers at the court of Louis XV. The Chinese merchants of Canton (present-day Guangzhou) paid for the copper plates and two hundred sets of prints to be delivered to China, with only a few sets retained in Paris.The prints exemplify the fusion of Eastern and Western representational styles fostered within the Qing imperial painting academy. The European technique of chiaroscuro-the modeling of forms through the use of light and shading-has been visibly tempered, as has the use of one-point perspective. Instead, the scenes present panoramic views and strongly up-tilt ground planes. At the same time, howevery, they reflect European preferences for anatomical accuracy, a single light source, and the mathematically correct reduction of scale to create the illusion of recession. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3658495 [Woman Seen from the Back]. Artist: Onésipe Aguado de las Marismas (French, Evry 1830-1893 Paris). Dimensions: Image: 30.8 × 25.7 cm (12 1/8 × 10 1/8 in.)Mount: 39.4 × 31 cm (15 1/2 × 12 3/16 in.). Date: ca. 1862.A wealthy amateur photographer and a familiar figure at the French imperial court, the viscount Onésipe-Gonsalve Aguado de Las Marismas joined the Société Française de Photographie in 1858. With his better-known brother Olympe, a founding member of the society, Onésipe Aguado was among the early makers of photographic enlargements. The two brothers also collaborated on tableaux vivants that depict with wit and playfulness the fads and amusements of elegant society.At once a portrait, a fashion plate, and a jest, this fascinating image expresses Aguado's whimsical mood, and is probably an extension of his work on foreshortening. It is strangely devoid of depth, as if the sitter were a two-dimensional cutout, a mere silhouette. The figure brings to mind the compositions of such painters as Caspar David Friedrich and René Magritte, both of whom made haunting use of figures seen from the back. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA. Author: Onésipe Aguado de las Marismas.
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alb3610557 Firedog (Jupiter Victorious over the Titans) (chenet) (one of a pair). Artist: After models by Alessandro Algardi (Italian, Bologna 1598-1654 Rome). Culture: probably Italian. Dimensions: Height: 45 1/2 in. (115.6 cm). Date: 18th century.According to the prominent biographer of artists Giovanni Pietro Bellori (1613-1696), the Baroque sculptor Alessandro Algardi, active in Rome, modeled a set of four firedogs representing the four elements in the guise of mythological figures. Commissioned for Philip IV, king of Spain, the models were created not long before the artist's death, in 1654. Two of the designs, the figures of Jupiter and Juno as fire and air--a symbolism quite appropriate to their use as firedogs--were executed on a reduced scale for the French court, both in silver and in bronze. Firedogs of this exuberant model, which create a sense of movement and are interesting in the round, also found a market among the French aristocracy and are listed in late seventeenth- and eighteenthcentury inventories and sale catalogues. It is generally thought that some of them--varying slightly from Algardi's originals, which are still extant in Spain--were made in France rather than in Italy. The Museum's firedogs were cast in multiple pieces, which have been carefully joined together. They have largely kept their original patina.The chief Roman god, Jupiter, ruler of the sky and master of lightning and thunder, is seated on an eagle, a form he once assumed, atop a globe. Two kneeling Titans shoulder the rocks on which the globe is poised, while a third reclines on the base. Facing her husband, the goddess Juno is perched on her own symbolic animal, the peacock. Representing beauty, this bird stands on a globe carried by wind gods, their cheeks full of air.Although the casts have long been considered seventeenth century, the raised heads of the deities and the sweet, smiling countenance of Juno, as well as her hair ornament and details of her sandals, suggest an eighteenth century date for the Museum's majestic firedogs instead. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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akg7895848 RARE DAOIST DIGNITARY JIANGYI ROBE (BACK). SILK.China. 18th/19th c.Silk satin, embroidered with gold and dyed silk threads. Backed with blue silk. This back part of a Daoist dignitary robe consists of once yellow silk and is embroidered with big dragons, dragon medallions and a pagoda in the centre, flanked by two more dragons and a star constellation. The fragment still keeps the shape of the robe with a rounded bottom seam. Such huge robes were used by Daoist dignitaries when conducting rituals, which were also held at the imperial court of Qing. About 130 x 173cm. Condition B.Provenance:-Coll. of Erich Boltze and Ruth Baroness von Gersdorff. Acquired locally before 1948.Compare:-The Art Institute of Chicago: Clothed to Rule the Universe, Ming and Qing Dynasty Textiles, 2000. Compare type p. 43, p. 67.. Art trade, Van Ham.
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akg7869343 HACKERT, JAKOB PHILIPP1737 Prenzlau - 1807 FlorenceLandscape near Cajazzo. Water coloured pen drawing on paper. 64 x 46,5cm. Signed and dated lower left: a Cajazzo 1798 / Filippo Hackert f. Framed. Literature:Nordhoff, Claudia und Reimer, Hans: Jakob Philipp Hackert 1737-1807. Verzeichnis seiner Werke, Band II, Berlin 1994, cat.No. 912, without fig. Assessment:Dr. Claudia Nordhoff, Rome, January 21, 2014. Provenance: Auction Berlin, since then private ownership.In her detailed assessment Claudia Nordhoff describes the different aspects of the creative work of Hackert, which characterise this large paper work.From the 1770s onwards the artist has been known for his type of picture of the ""tree-portrait"": ""...These are large-scale, brown washed drawings, which depict single trees, which can be botanically clearly identified; for the most part references to the exact location is made on these drawings. They were sold alternatively to his oil paintings by the artist...""He depicts this botanic element of his creative work, which can in the broadest sense also be regarded as a subject of the Enlightenment, at a time and in a landscape, which are important to him each as an artist and as a human being. On his hikes around the year 1798, shortly before the end of his time as court painter in Naples, he documented the area around Cajazzo in the Volturno valley in various drawings almost cartographically. Some of the drawings of this series, among which one is the here presented, newly discovered sheet, can today be found in the collections of the museums in Vienna or Berlin. ""On the one hand the present drawing can be described as a significant example for Hackert's art in the depiction of trees. The tall oak unfolds its crown with the typical, small jagged leaves in front of a bright, cloudless summer sky, beneath which, only slighty hinted, the winding course of the Volturno stretches. The observer may almost feel the heat, that hangs over the river valley and the castle hill Caiazzo. Also the two women resting wearily beneath the tree inspire the observer's association of the hot, southern summer. On the other hand the sheet belongs to a documentation program, which Hackert dedicated to the region near Caiazzo: this is not just a random oak to be found anywhere in the width of the kingdom of Naples, but a certain, unique tree which was picked out by the artist from the diversity of natural forms and is presented to us for the contemplation of all its beauty. Having this in mind the observer feels almost tempted to explore the Volturno valley and to examine the presented view, maybe even the depicted oak, himself. An endeavour which surely would have gained Hackert's applause."" [translation].
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akg1559054 Hyacinthe RIGAUD:. This portrait is one of the two recorded by Rigaud as being painted in 1724. Antoine Paris (1668 - 1733) was the oldest of four brothers, sons of an innkeeper, all of whom became wealthy financiers during the early 18th century. Antoine held lucrative appointments in connection with the army and the royal Treasury, but he and his brothers were banished in 1726 when Cardinal Fleury became Louis XV's first minister. The fine characterisation of the head, a hallmark of the work of Rigaud and of his contemporary, Largilliere (1656 - 1746), seems almost eclipsed by the grandeur of the setting and the bravura handling of the draperies. Antoine Paris is shown with the grandiloquence characteristic of Rigaud's court portraits: seated in a library beside an elaborate table with the base of an immense column to one side and a vase to the other. Clutching a blue velvet drapery he turns to the right as though greeting an unseen visitor. The painting's frame is the original. Oil on canvas, 144.7 × 110.5 cm, 1724. London, National Gallery. Museum: London, National Gallery. Copyright: Additional permissions needed for non-editorial use.
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alb4455952 Napkin with the arms of Cornelis Hop, Napkin of linen damask with the arms of Cornelis Hop. Midfield: symmetrical pattern of multifaceted volute drinks with thickened blocks at the nodes. In between a lying oval shield with a coat of arms of Cornelis Hop (1685-1762), ambassador to the court of King Louis XV of France: quartered, 1 and 4 headed bird standing on ball (the bird of 1 surrounded, the bird of 4 surrounded), 2 and three two turned wings. Heart shield divided: 1 a crossbar, 2 on the right a five-pointed star, on the left a used waxman. The shield covered with five-leaf crown. Shieldholders: a turned away eagle on the right, a turned away lion on the left. Borders: weapon trophies. Corners: a round axis. Around block edge, Cornelis Hop (II), anonymous, Southern Netherlands, c. 1700 - c. 1724, linen (material), damask, w 113 cm × h 90 cm.
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alb1964571 Fantoches. (Marionettes) from Debussy's Fêtes Galantes, Scaramouche and Pulcinelle. Man embracing a naked woman. Two figues in silhouette against the moon. Fêtes galantes. [Poèmes]. Illustrations de George Barbier. Paris: H. Piazza, 1928. Fêtes Galantes is an album consisting of romantic prints of French life among the upper classes of the 19th century. Rich aristocrats of the French court used to play gallant scenes from the commedia dell’ arte that were called Fetes Galantes. The prints accompany Paul Verlaine's poetry. Each album contains 20 lithograph prints with pochoir highlighting by George Barbier. Source: L.45/2847. Language: French.
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alb4489707 Napkin with the arms of Cornelis Hop, Napkin of linen damask with the arms of Cornelis Hop. Midfield: symmetrical pattern of multifaceted volute drinks with thickened blocks at the nodes. In between a lying oval shield with a coat of arms of Cornelis Hop (1685-1762), ambassador to the court of King Louis XV of France: quartered, 1 and 4 headed bird standing on ball (the bird of 1 surrounded, the bird of 4 surrounded), 2 and three two turned wings. Heart shield divided: 1 a crossbar, 2 on the right a five-pointed star, on the left a used waxman. The shield covered with five-leaf crown. Shieldholders: a turned away eagle on the right, a turned away lion on the left. Borders: weapon trophies. Corners: a round axis. Around block edge, Cornelis Hop (II), anonymous, Southern Netherlands, c. 1700 - c. 1724, linen (material), damask, w 113 cm × h 90 cm.
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alb4479876 Napkin with the arms of Cornelis Hop, Napkin of linen damask with the arms of Cornelis Hop. Midfield: symmetrical pattern of multifaceted volute drinks with thickened blocks at the nodes. In between a lying oval shield with a coat of arms of Cornelis Hop (1685-1762), ambassador to the court of King Louis XV of France: quartered, 1 and 4 headed bird standing on ball (the bird of 1 surrounded, the bird of 4 surrounded), 2 and three two turned wings. Heart shield divided: 1 a crossbar, 2 on the right a five-pointed star, on the left a used waxman. The shield covered with five-leaf crown. Shieldholders: a turned away eagle on the right, a turned away lion on the left. Borders: weapon trophies. Corners: a round axis. Around block edge, Cornelis Hop (II), anonymous, Southern Netherlands, c. 1700 - c. 1724, linen (material), damask, w 113 cm × h 90 cm.
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alb4479846 Napkin with the arms of Cornelis Hop, Napkin of linen damask with the arms of Cornelis Hop. Midfield: symmetrical pattern of multifaceted volute drinks with thickened blocks at the nodes. In between a lying oval shield with a coat of arms of Cornelis Hop (1685-1762), ambassador to the court of King Louis XV of France: quartered, 1 and 4 headed bird standing on ball (the bird of 1 surrounded, the bird of 4 surrounded), 2 and three two turned wings. Heart shield divided: 1 a crossbar, 2 on the right a five-pointed star, on the left a used waxman. The shield covered with five-leaf crown. Shieldholders: a turned away eagle on the right, a turned away lion on the left. Borders: weapon trophies. Corners: a round axis. Around block edge, Cornelis Hop (II), anonymous, Southern Netherlands, c. 1700 - c. 1724, linen (material), damask, w 113 cm × h 90 cm.
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alb4471611 Napkin with the arms of Cornelis Hop, Napkin of linen damask with the arms of Cornelis Hop. Midfield: symmetrical pattern of multifaceted volute drinks with thickened blocks at the nodes. In between a lying oval shield with a coat of arms of Cornelis Hop (1685-1762), ambassador to the court of King Louis XV of France: quartered, 1 and 4 headed bird standing on ball (the bird of 1 surrounded, the bird of 4 surrounded), 2 and three two turned wings. Heart shield divided: 1 a crossbar, 2 on the right a five-pointed star, on the left a used waxman. The shield covered with five-leaf crown. Shieldholders: a turned away eagle on the right, a turned away lion on the left. Borders: weapon trophies. Corners: a round axis. Around block edge, Cornelis Hop (II), anonymous, Southern Netherlands, c. 1700 - c. 1724, linen (material), damask, w 113 cm × h 90 cm.
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alb4474443 Napkin with the arms of Cornelis Hop, Napkin of linen damask with the arms of Cornelis Hop. Midfield: symmetrical pattern of multifaceted volute drinks with thickened blocks at the nodes. In between a lying oval shield with a coat of arms of Cornelis Hop (1685-1762), ambassador to the court of King Louis XV of France: quartered, 1 and 4 headed bird standing on ball (the bird of 1 surrounded, the bird of 4 surrounded), 2 and three two turned wings. Heart shield divided: 1 a crossbar, 2 on the right a five-pointed star, on the left a used waxman. The shield covered with five-leaf crown. Shieldholders: a turned away eagle on the right, a turned away lion on the left. Borders: weapon trophies. Corners: a round axis. Around block edge, Cornelis Hop (II), anonymous, Southern Netherlands, c. 1700 - c. 1724, linen (material), damask, w 113 cm × h 90 cm.
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alb4502749 Napkin with the arms of Cornelis Hop, Napkin of linen damask with the arms of Cornelis Hop. Midfield: symmetrical pattern of multifaceted volute drinks with thickened blocks at the nodes. In between a lying oval shield with a coat of arms of Cornelis Hop (1685-1762), ambassador to the court of King Louis XV of France: quartered, 1 and 4 headed bird standing on ball (the bird of 1 surrounded, the bird of 4 surrounded), 2 and three two turned wings. Heart shield divided: 1 a crossbar, 2 on the right a five-pointed star, on the left a used waxman. The shield covered with five-leaf crown. Shieldholders: a turned away eagle on the right, a turned away lion on the left. Borders: weapon trophies. Corners: a round axis. Around block edge, Cornelis Hop (II), anonymous, Southern Netherlands, c. 1700 - c. 1724, linen (material), damask, w 113 cm × h 90 cm.
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alb4074969 Humble Petition of the British Subjects. In 1773 the British government established the Supreme Court of Judicature for Bengal. Controversially, the court limited the use of juries to criminal cases, while at the same time it effectively extended English law to Indians in the region by admitting their lawsuits. As this petition shows, the Supreme Court was resented by many British expatriates, who felt that it weakened their authority and undermined ‘the Great Charter of British Liberties’. Ill-feeling reached its peak in the 1779 civil trial of James Creassy, Superintendent of Public Works in Calcutta, who was denied the right to trial by jury for the assault, battery and false imprisonment of two Hindu carpenters. Creassy’s case was the catalyst for this petition, bearing 647 signatures, to the House of Commons in London. It called for the restriction of legal actions by Indians and the re-establishment of the ‘inherent, unalienable and indefeasible’ rights granted to Englishmen in Magna Carta. To the Honourable the Commons of Great Britain in Parliament assembled. The Humble Petition of the British Subjects residing in the Province of Bengal, Behar and Orissa and their Several Dependancies. 26 February 1779. Source: IOR/H/144, p.327.
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alb1508457 Charles Dickens, from a recent daguerreotype by Mayall, 1 December, 1855. Memoir of Charles Dickens. The lives of men of genius when happy, are ordinarily uneventful. It may, perhaps, be one of the reaspms for the paucity of materials available for the life of him who was "not for an age but for all time," that our Shakespeare went through life a prosperous gentlemen, that he had shares, and rents, and messages, and tenements, and that he died at last in affluence, in his bed, in his own house, near the pleasant town he loved so well. But the most moving and most copious literary memoirs are merely records of miseries. The blindness of Milton, the weary life-struggle of Dryden, the deformity of Pope, the persecution of Defoe, and the melancholy of Swift; the stern woe of Dante, the heart-sickness of Petrarch, the despair of Butler; Tasso's fetters, Cervantes' neglect, Camoens' hospital pallet, Guilbert's starvation, and Chatterton's suicide; all these are bold and jutting headlands in the seascape of life - stern and rugged rocks, all beaten by the tempests of time, and seamed and furrowed by the salt waters of sorrow. These the painter can seize and transfer to canvas, giving force and variety to his picture. He can paint the surging billows and the angry sky; but what scope has he for display when the sea is smooth as glass, calm as a good man's bossom, when the bark glides placidly along, when the log of the mariner may be summed up in two words: Genius or Success?. These two words are really the summary of the career of the famous writer whose portrait graces our page. There are no moving accidents by flood or field in his life to tell; his life has been one of uniform industry and prosperity. Yet, as our readers must naturally be anxious to learn even the minutest particulars concerning one who possesses such remarkable talents, and has occupied for so long so conspicuous a position in society, we will proceed, to the best of our ability, to tell how Mr. Dickens won that fame he preserves so staunchly and wears so gently.. Charles Dickens was born in February, 1812, at Landport, Portsmouth. His father, Mr. John Dickensm, had been, in the earlier part of his life, a clerk in the Navy Pay department, and his duties rendered it necessary that he should make frequent changes of residence from one naval dockyard to another - moving from Portsmouth to Plymouth, and from Portsmouth again to Sheerness and Chatham. The future novelist received his education in a school in or near Rochester; and it is to his youthful peregrinations in the county of Kent, and his Kentish schoolboy experiences, that we may ascribe much of the minute knowledge he displays in his writings on the topography and scenery of the county of "hops, apples, and pretty girls," and of the fondness he evinces for recurrence to Kentish scenes and Kentish people. "On revient toujours à ses premières amours." The memorable equestrian expedition of Mr. Pickwick (as noteworthy, surely, as the expedition of "Humphrey Clinker") started from the Mitre, at Rochester; Dingley Dell was near Cobham; the catastrophe of the Tubbs family took place ar Ramsgate; it was in the Theatre Royal, Portsmouth, that Nicholas Nickleby played Romeo to poor Smike's Apothecary; it was to Dover, through Rochester, Chatham, and Maidstone, that little David Copperfield travelled, weary and footsore, to his aunt Trotwood; it was at Canterbury he went to school to Doctor Strong; and, finally, it was in the keeping room of Master Richard Watt's charity, at Rochester, that the "seven poor travellers," "not being rogues or proctors," told their Christmas stories.. We have no means of judging how far, or to what age, the scholastic curriculum of Charles Dickens extended. We learn, however, that at the peace, Mr. John Dickens retired, with a pension, from the Government service, and, removing to London, found lucrative employment for his talents, as a reporter for the public press. It is therefore probable that his son completed his education in the metropolis. The fact of his father being a newspaper reporter, would, it has been somewhat flippantly remarked, have "familiarised him with 'copy'" from an early age; yet such implied familiarity did not, on his entrance into authorship, exempt him from the delightful tremour, that anguish of delight, incidental to all tyros in printers' ink, and that moved him, as he himself graphically describes, after reading in a magazine his first effusion, "dropped stealthily one evening at twilight, with fear and trembling, into a dark letter box, up a dark court in Fleet Street," to walk down to Westminster Hall, and turn into it for half an hour, because his eyes "were so dimmed with joy and pride that they could not bear the street and were not fit to be seen there.". Like many other future celebrities thrust into lawyers' dens to engross deeds instead of penning stanzas, the youthful Charles Dickens was for some time in an attorney's office. We were turning over a biographical notice of the author of "Pickwick" the other day, where, in reference to this portion of his career, it was stated that "his father took the preliminary steps to make him an attorney;" but this we think to have been no more the case than the appointment of a youth to a Clerkship in the Stamp Office is a "preliminary step" towards making him Chairman of the Board of Inland Revenue. However, in the sojourn in the domains of Themis, Charles Dickens became intimately acquainted with the mysteries of legal penetralia, and the intricacies of legal chicane, both of which he has so admirably depicted and exposed in his novels. But the literary vocation, the cacoethes scribendi, was not to be kept down by pounce and green "ferret." To use a French idiom, it "pierced," and doubtless after the irretrievable ruin of many skins of parchment and blotting of office foolscap, it asserted and made itself recognised. Charles Dickens's literary début took place, like those of Talfourd and Campbell, in the Reporters' Gallery. He became a member of the parliamentary corps of the "True Sun," an ultra liberal paper. He was subsequently one of the reporters on the "Mirror of Parliament," a journal whose avowed object was to give in extenso, word for word, all the speeches of every member of the Legislature. It was splendidly printed, produced at an enormous expense, and after a session or two fell to the ground in the true heroic style. Mr. Dickens, about 1835-6, passed to the staff of the "Morning Chronicle," and in its succursal, the "Evening Chronicle," appeared serially those delightful daguerreotypes of life and character, the "Sketches of Boz." After a lapse of twenty years' cheap literature, these "sketches" seem at the first glance to be very slight performances indeed. There is probably not a number of Mr. Dickens's own periodical, "Household Words," that does not contain an article on London life or manners, either from his own or a coadjutor's pen, possessing more thought, and observation, and graphic truth than can be found in a dozen of the "Sketches." But they were the first of their class. Dickens was the first to unite the delicately playful thread of Charles Lambe's street musings, half experiences, half bookish phantasies, with vigorous wit, and humour, and observation of Goldsmith's "Citizen of the World," his "Indigent Philosopher," and "Man in Black," and twine them together into that golden cord of essay which combines literature with philosophy, humour with morality, amusement with instruction. The Sketches by "Boz," (the pseudonym originated with one given to a pet brother, who, rechristened "Moses," in honour of the "Vicar of Wakefield," facetiously pronounced the name through the nose, "Bozes," and at last corrupted it to "Boz"), made a great sensation at the time. They were afterwards collected into one volume, with numerous etchings by George Cruikshank, then in the zenith of his fame, and were published by Mr. Macrone, of St. James's Square, a young and enterprising bookseller. We are not aware of the exact sum paid to Mr. Dickens for the copyright of the "Sketches," but it is patent that, a few months afterwards, the publisher, falling into difficulties, sold his copyright in the work either to Mr. Bentley or to Messrs. Chapman and Hall, for eleven hundred pounds. Poor Macrone was unfortunate, fell into ill health, and died, leaving a widow and young children, for whose benefit Mr. Dickens, with the assistance of some literary friends, edited and published a work composed of "voluntary contributions," called the "Pic-Nic Papers.". The "Sketches by Boz," were, as all the world knows, succeeded by the "Pickwick Papers". Originally intended as a mere vehicle to Robert Seymour's admirable caricatures, a foil to his redundant humour, they became, after he lamented the inexplicable death of the artist, attractions in themselves. The wit and genius of the author soon elevated Mr. Pickwick from a burlesque elderly Cockney to the rank of the hero of a comic epic. It would be useless, impertinent were there indeed space, to descant on the merits of this glorious book. Many more has Dickens written since the last number of "Pickwick" has been given to the world. Thousands and thousands have since laughed and wept at the bidding of this kindly magician, but no work of his has ever created, will ever create, the excitement, excite the curiosity, compel the attention, give half the genial pleasure, felt by the whole public when they perused the "Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club." As when a man is blet with many children, and looks around and knows not which he loves the most, but yet remembers the first little child that died, the "baby" - there have been many "babies" since then, but this was "baby" par excellence - so we, gratefully and pleasurably calling in review the many good books, which, in the familiar green covers, have delighted us from year to year, can never forget or conceal our preference for the first-born - the book of books. We put him not first because he was the best, but we like him best because he was the first. "Pickwick" brought about the same result with Dickens as "Childe Harold" with Byron. He awoke one morning and found himself famous. From the ranks of the great army of literary martyrs, he came calmly and smilingly to take the bàton of field-marshal as of right. That is very nearly twenty years ago, and bravely has he kept his high command. Reader, remember, when Charles Dickens was an unknown newspaper reporter, William Makepeace Thackeray was a "crack" writer on "Fraser's Magazine," and lo! it is but four or five years since the author of "Vanity Fair" attained an equally elevated seat on the literary daisas the author of the "Pickwick Papers".. The history of Mr. Dickens, from the publication of "Pickwick" to the present time, is little more than a history of his successive works - "Oliver Twist," "Nicholas Nickleby," "The Olde Curiosity Shop," "Martin Chuzzlewit," "Barnaby Rudge," "Dombey and Son," "David Copperfield," and "Bleak House,"; the Christmas books - the "Christmas Carol," the "Chimes," the "Cricket on the Hearth," the "Battle of Life," and the "Haunted Man". Beyond the fact that he has produced these good works, that he has made journeys to the United States and to Italy, and embodied his travelling experience in "American Notes" and "Pictures from Italy," that he has been since 1850 the conductor and (we believe) the proprietor of "Household Words," and that he has avowed himself lately to be a thoroughgoing Administrative Reformer, and made an eloquent speech at the great meeting at Drury Lane Theatre, very little more can be said of Mr. Dickens's public career. Of him, in his private capacity, a few more words remain to be written. Our fair readers will be glad to learn that he married, in the morning of his fame, Miss Catherine Hogarth, the daughter of Mr. George Hogarth, a well-known musical critic and writer, and that he is blessed in having a quiver full of arrows - male and female. For his personal appearance, we must refer our readers to the portrait; and to those who would wish to form an idea of his more youthful semblance, we may commend the engraving from Mr. Maclise's picture, prefixed to the first edition of "Nicholas Nickleby". To yet more curious amateurs of sayings and doings, we may add that Charles Dickens is an early riser and worker, an indefatigable pedestrian, averaging, we have heard, ten miles a day; that he is a vivacious companion, a brilliant conversationalist, and an accomplished amateur actor. Were the writer of this notice in the habit of eating toads or hunting tufts, he could add a great deal more concerning Mr. Dickens's private character, and of certain things he does with his right hand, letting not his left hand know that he does them. Some women that are widows, and same children that are fatherless, and, we regret to say, too many members of the ingenious confraternity of begging-letter writers, will understand our meaning. Of course, Mr. Dickens has had his detractors: of course, Sir Benjamin Backbite has shaken his head, and said "It could not last"; of course, Mrs. Sneerwell has smiled sarcastically and whispered "overrated, my dear". What else could be expected? Some charitable people even circulated a report a few years ago, that he had gone raving mad! Some even set afloat a joke (good, but stolen from an honester wit) that Dickens had "gone up like a rocket, and would come down like the stick." Somehow, he has not come down yet. Then the army of detractors took refuge in the safe insinuation, "that he had written himself out." Somehow, "Bleak House," his last work had a larger sale than any of its predecessors.. This is not the place to criticise the writings of Charles Dickens. The best criticisms, perhaps will be spontaneously evoked from the hearts of thousands of our readers, when they glance at this portrait, and remember how many smiles they have given to young Bailey - how many tears to Little Nell. Criticism! - if such were indeed needed - the noblest, would be found in the admission of William Thackeray, that he had wept for the death of Tiny Tim, and sung a paean of triumph when he found that Bob Cratchit's little child did not really die.
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alb3634668 The Emperor Greeting The Triumphant Troops Outside of the Capital. Artist: (direxit) Charles Nicolas Cochin II (French, Paris 1715-1790 Paris); after Giovanni Damasceno Salusti (1727-1781); François Denis Née (French, Paris 1732-1817 Paris). Dimensions: Sheet: 38 5/16 × 25 3/4 in. (97.3 × 65.4 cm)Plate: 36 13/16 × 22 9/16 in. (93.5 × 57.3 cm). Series/Portfolio: The Conquests of the Emperor of China(Les Conquêtes de l'Empereur de la Chine). Date: 1772.This print shows the Chinese emperor on horseback, followed by ranks of infantry approaching a circular stand, surrounded by soldiers, on which enemy flags are presented.Part of a set of sixteen, "The Emperor Greeting The Triumphant Troops Outside of the Capital" was commissioned by the Qianlong Emperor in 1765 to commemorate Manchu victories (1755-59) over the Eleuths, the Dzungars, and other Central Asian peoples in the present-day region of Xinjiang. Made under the direction of Charles-Nicolas Cochin (1715-1790), the prints, which follow reduced-scale copies of paintings by Jesuit artists working in Beijing, were etched and engraved in France from 1767 to 1774 by the finest printmakers at the court of Louis XV. The Chinese merchants of Canton (present-day Guangzhou) paid for the copper plates and two hundred sets of prints to be delivered to China, with only a few sets retained in Paris.The prints exemplify the fusion of Eastern and Western representational styles fostered within the Qing imperial painting academy. The European technique of chiaroscuro-the modeling of forms through the use of light and shading-has been visibly tempered, as has the use of one-point perspective. Instead, the scenes present panoramic views and strongly up-tilt ground planes. At the same time, howevery, they reflect European preferences for anatomical accuracy, a single light source, and the mathematically correct reduction of scale to create the illusion of recession. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA. Author: FRANCOIS DENIS NEE. (direxit) Charles Nicolas Cochin II. after Giovanni Damasceno Salusti.
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alb3664934 Nocturne (Nocturne: The Thames at Battersea). Artist: James McNeill Whistler (American, Lowell, Massachusetts 1834-1903 London). Dimensions: Image: 6 3/4 × 10 3/16 in. (17.1 × 25.9 cm)Sheet: 13 1/2 × 19 5/16 in. (34.3 × 49 cm). Date: 1878.Born in New England, Whistler studied painting in Paris and then based himself in London. There he demonstrated that making prints could be as serious an artistic pursuit as painting. Representing the river Thames, then the lagoons of Venice, Whistler developed subtle tonal variations that alluded dreamily to a triumph of water and air over substance.In this early lithograph, Whistler worked directly on the stone (rather than using transfer paper), applying washes of ink to achieve striking atmospheric effects. The artist printed this river subject in 1878, the year in which his libel case against the art critic John Ruskin--involving Ruskin's attack on one of Whistler's painted "Nocturnes"--was heard. Though Whistler won the case, the court costs forced him to declare bankruptcy in the following year. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3642896 Jousting Armor (Rennzeug) and Matching Half-Shaffron. Culture: German, probably Dresden or Annaberg. Dimensions: Wt. 91 lb. 6 oz. (41.45 kg). Date: ca. 1580-90.This armor was intended for use in the Scharfrennen, a joust fought in an open field by two contestants mounted on horses and armed with relatively sharp lances. The sport remained popular at the court of the prince-electors of Saxony long after it had gone out of fashion elsewhere in Europe.This is one of more than thirty almost identical armors--some brightly polished and others painted black--formerly kept in the ducal armory in Dresden for use in court tournaments. It is thought that they were made locally by Saxon armorers in Dresden and Annaberg.Painted inside the backplate is the name Herr von Breitenbach. This refers to Karl Christian von Breitenbach, an officer in the Saxon court from 1694 to 1726, who presumably wore the armor at a wedding tournament held in Dresden on September 12, 1719. This series of armors was used last at a tournament in Dresden in 1936. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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akg4792054 Ehrt, Rainer; geb. 1960. "Du solt kein falsch Zeugnis reden widder deinen nehesten", 2016. Nr. 8 einer Folge der Zehn Gebote. Tuschfeder und Acryl auf Kunstdruck ("Melanchthon nimmt die Taufe vor", linker Flügel des Reformationsaltars in der Stadtkirche in Wittenberg, von Lucas Cranach d. Ä. begonnen, von Lucas Cranach d. J. vollendet). Besitz des Künstlers. Copyright: Rainer Ehrt's artistic copyright cleared via akg-images. This artwork is not in the public domain. akg-images represents the artistic copyright of this artist, please contact us from more information and to clear the necessary permissions.
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akg4466711 The Three FABLES'Talismani'di Guido Gozzano (Torino 1883-1916) Italian poet the illustration represent the Cassandrino little one, that it lavishes generous mance in order to enter to court. Its wealth is due to a talisman: an stock exchange that every time that it introduces to you the hand finds one hundred shields to us. It is one of the donated magical instruments in inheritance to he and its farelli from the father. The others two talismans are a table cloth that enough to stretch it, because foods and a cape of the invisibiltà appear indefinitely that has also the gift of farces to transport where it wants. The fables of Gozzano were published on the Courier of the Little ones in years 1908 -1915 approximately.
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akg4450464 JESUIT Missionaries astronomers in China in the XVII sec.the Court of the Emperor represented with several astronomical instruments and Jesuit symbols. Low two Chinese personages converted and the Cross from they used. Recording from a work of P. Duhalde. Library of the P.I.M.E., Milan.
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alb5071626 painting, Catharina de la Court-Backer, before 1711?, signature front, bottom right: Catharina Backer, canvas, oil paint, painted, Carrier: 48.7 × 41 × 1.4cm 487 × 410 × 14mm, With frame: 62.7 × 54.5 × 3.5cm 627 × 545 × 35mm, butterfly, still life, flower, Family portrait of an unknown, probably Amsterdam family: a couple with a son and a daughter, depicted in full detail in a landscape. In the middle is the father who says goodbye to his wife, who is a little to the right. He holds a spear in his right hand, a cap in the left, has long wavy hair and mustache, and is dressed in a short brown tunic with red tippet and boots. To the right of a house, the mother is almost used to the left. She gestures with the right hand and holds a fan in the left hand resting on a balustrade with Persian carpet. She is wearing a black cap and blue dress. Right behind her, just visible behind the balustrade, a girl. Two dogs rush out of the house. On the left, the son is already walking forward, half-looking at his parents. He holds a cap in the right hand and a hunting horn in the left and is dressed in a lilac tunic and boots. In the landscape a deer followed by dogs and a hunter. Signed.
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alb5068916 painting, Catharina de la Court-Backer, before 1711?, signature front, bottom right: Catharina Backer, canvas, oil paint, painted, Carrier: 48.7 × 41 × 1.4cm 487 × 410 × 14mm, With frame: 62.7 × 54.5 × 3.5cm 627 × 545 × 35mm, butterfly, still life, flower, Family portrait of an unknown, probably Amsterdam family: a couple with a son and a daughter, depicted in full detail in a landscape. In the middle is the father who says goodbye to his wife, who is a little to the right. He holds a spear in his right hand, a cap in the left, has long wavy hair and mustache, and is dressed in a short brown tunic with red tippet and boots. To the right of a house, the mother is almost used to the left. She gestures with the right hand and holds a fan in the left hand resting on a balustrade with Persian carpet. She is wearing a black cap and blue dress. Right behind her, just visible behind the balustrade, a girl. Two dogs rush out of the house. On the left, the son is already walking forward, half-looking at his parents. He holds a cap in the right hand and a hunting horn in the left and is dressed in a lilac tunic and boots. In the landscape a deer followed by dogs and a hunter. Signed.
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alb5068117 painting, Catharina de la Court-Backer, before 1711?, signature front, bottom right: Catharina Backer, canvas, oil paint, painted, Carrier: 48.7 × 41 × 1.4cm 487 × 410 × 14mm, With frame: 62.7 × 54.5 × 3.5cm 627 × 545 × 35mm, butterfly, still life, flower, Family portrait of an unknown, probably Amsterdam family: a couple with a son and a daughter, depicted in full detail in a landscape. In the middle is the father who says goodbye to his wife, who is a little to the right. He holds a spear in his right hand, a cap in the left, has long wavy hair and mustache, and is dressed in a short brown tunic with red tippet and boots. To the right of a house, the mother is almost used to the left. She gestures with the right hand and holds a fan in the left hand resting on a balustrade with Persian carpet. She is wearing a black cap and blue dress. Right behind her, just visible behind the balustrade, a girl. Two dogs rush out of the house. On the left, the son is already walking forward, half-looking at his parents. He holds a cap in the right hand and a hunting horn in the left and is dressed in a lilac tunic and boots. In the landscape a deer followed by dogs and a hunter. Signed.
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alb5067508 painting, Catharina de la Court-Backer, before 1711?, signature front, bottom right: Catharina Backer, canvas, oil paint, painted, Carrier: 48.7 × 41 × 1.4cm 487 × 410 × 14mm, With frame: 62.7 × 54.5 × 3.5cm 627 × 545 × 35mm, butterfly, still life, flower, Family portrait of an unknown, probably Amsterdam family: a couple with a son and a daughter, depicted in full detail in a landscape. In the middle is the father who says goodbye to his wife, who is a little to the right. He holds a spear in his right hand, a cap in the left, has long wavy hair and mustache, and is dressed in a short brown tunic with red tippet and boots. To the right of a house, the mother is almost used to the left. She gestures with the right hand and holds a fan in the left hand resting on a balustrade with Persian carpet. She is wearing a black cap and blue dress. Right behind her, just visible behind the balustrade, a girl. Two dogs rush out of the house. On the left, the son is already walking forward, half-looking at his parents. He holds a cap in the right hand and a hunting horn in the left and is dressed in a lilac tunic and boots. In the landscape a deer followed by dogs and a hunter. Signed.
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alb3604739 Commode. Culture: German, Munich. Designer: Design attributed to Jean François Cuvilliés the Elder (German (born Belgian), Soignies 1695-1768 Munich). Dimensions: 33 1/4 × 51 1/2 × 24 1/2 in. (84.5 × 130.8 × 62.2 cm). Maker: Construction attributed to Johann Michael Schmidt (German); Carving attributed to Joachim Dietrich. Date: ca. 1735-40.When in the eighteenth century "a French aristocrat or nouveau riche had a stately home built for him, in Paris or in the provinces, he was well advised to listen to his architect's warning that the cost of construction amounted to no more than a mere quarter of total expenditure, and that the rest would have to be spent on interior decoration in order to make the edifice conform to the accepted patterns of living in the grand manner."[1] This wry observation in Louis-Sébastien Mercier's Tableau de Paris (1780) held true not only in France but in other countries as well, since the European upper classes looked to Paris for everything à la mode. But the princes of the often small, scattered territories of the Holy Roman Empire lacked the financial resources to build and decorate on a grand scale. Thus, economy and thrifty inventiveness reigned in the workshops of most south German courts. Appearance counted for everything, trumping inconspicuous quality. In cabinetmaking, cheap pine or spruce was used as a secondary wood instead of oak or other hardwood for carcase construction, and paint was chosen instead of veneer to bedeck it. A handsome design in combination with an imaginative execution compensated for skimping on the fabric of show pieces that emulated much more expensive Parisian works. This kind of furniture, known as Bildhauermöbel ("sculptor's furniture"; see also acc. no. 52.56.1),[2] reflected the mutual efforts of a designer, a cabinetmaker for the body, an artisan carver (called in German a Schneidkistler, or "cut-cabinetmaker"), and a skillful gilder and painter (Fassmaler).[3]The exuberant gilded decoration on this commode-in particular, the corner terms with satyrs' heads emerging from scroll feet-alludes to the works of celebrated Parisian masters of veneer and ormolu, such as André-Charles Boulle (1642-1732) and, in the next generation, Charles Cressent (1685-1768), whose metal mounts frequently attract more attention than the veneered furniture itself (see the catalogue entries for acc. nos. 1982.60.82 and 1982.60.56). These heavy metal mounts (and especially their labor-intensive mercury gilding) were infinitely more expensive than gilded wooden substitutes. This commode's gilded decoration is not even completely wood-based: the side panel and drawer front ornaments are cut into applied gesso, in the way plaster was applied to the ceilings and walls of contemporary south German churches and then painted and gilded so that the architecture seems to vanish, creating the illusion of "heaven on earth." When new, the skillfully water-gilded satyrs' heads and openwork aprons could surely be mistaken for gilt-bronze. Comparable examples that are less worn indicate that great care must have been given to the final finish and polishing of the gilded and painted areas of this commode to achieve a smooth and sparkling surface.[4] It is interesting to note that in comparison with French furniture the body is only slightly serpentine and that the gilded ornaments form a refined frame for the carcase in the way a precious-metal setting intensifies the look of a sparkling jewel. Only the functional hardware-the handles and the escutcheons, which protect the painted surface surrounding the keyholes from being scratched by the metal keys-is of cast and gilded bronze. Their relatively flat surface-the result of a poor job of chasing-is another indication that economy played a role in the assembly of this showcase piece.The commode's design can be attributed to the ingenious Bavarian court architect François Cuvilliés, one of the leading exponents of the Rococo style in Germany (see the catalogue entry for acc. no. 52.56.1). His celebrated furniture designs influenced Abraham Roentgen (1711-1793), the greatest German cabinetmaker of the 1750s to the 1770s (see the catalogue entry for acc. no. 41.82).[5] The present commode does not exactly match any of the twelve commodes published in Cuvilliés's Livre de diferents dessein de commodes between 1738 and 1742, which have more exaggerated and noticeably bulging contours;[6] however, a "Décoration de Lambris" design by Cuvilliés illustrates a commode with carved bearded heads crowning term volutes at its corners, as seen here.[7] Furthermore, the gilt-gesso decoration on the sides of the Museum's commode, a female bust on an elongated C-scroll pedestal framed by scrolled foliage and trelliswork, corresponds closely to an ornamental engraving in the architect's oeuvre.[8] A characteristic Cuvilliés detail is the foot, and especially its curling element, which also appears in the furniture at the Amalienburg hunting lodge at Nymphenburg, designed by Cuvilliés and carved by Johann Joachim Dietrich between 1735 and 1739.[9] Dietrich's name is mentioned in Munich court documents for the first time in 1729. On 14 March 1736, he was named court sculptor and praised for "good workmanship" in his appointment document.[10]It has been suggested that the construction of this commode should be attributed to Johann Michael Schmidt, but there is no real evidence for this.[11] Adolf Feulner connected the commode with a display cabinet in the Munich Residenz that has comparable ornamental details and proposed that the commode had been made for the counts of Lerchenfeld either for Schloss Kefering, near Regensburg, or the Lerchenfeld Palace in Munich;[12] but this, too, now seems highly unlikely.[13]In 1928 an advertisement for the commode was placed in Pantheon by the Munich firm of L. Bernheimer.[14] This art dealer had bought a closely related pair of commodes of almost the same size in 1918 for a then record amount at the auction of the collection of the Munich writer and publisher Georg Hirth.[15] Two other pairs of commodes, with only minor differences in their measurements and with similar features, are known: one pair, with female corner terms, is in the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, and the other is in the Archbishop's Palace in Munich, the former Holnstein Palace, which was commissioned by Count Franz Ludwig von Holnstein and most likely designed by Cuvilliés.[16]During conservation of the Museum's commode, diverse paint layers were discovered: a lead-white ground without dirt residue, then a blue layer and partial gilding, covered in turn by the present color and gilding. The commode may originally have been colored blue and partially or completely gilded.[17] It probably had a pair, which, if it could be located, might give clues to the original appearance of both and to their original provenance. The top of the Museum's commode is a polished slab of mottled Tegernsee limestone,[18] original to the piece.[Wolfram Koeppe 2006]I am grateful to Mechthild Baumeister, Conservator, Department of Objects Conservation, Metropolitan Museum, who restored the commode in 1989, for discussing it with me. She contributed much valuable information to the departmental file on this interesting piece. I also thank Afra Schick, Furniture Curator, Staatliche Schlösserverwaltung Berlin-Brandenburg.Footnotes:[1] Louis-Sébastien Mercier. Tableau de Paris. 4 vols. Amsterdam, 1780, vol. 1, pp. 283-84; quoted in translation in Michael Stürmer "Höfische Kultur und frühmoderne Unternehmer: Zur Ökonomie des Luxus im 18. Jahrhundert." Histoische Zeitschrift 229 (1979), p. 496.[2] Eighteenth-century inventories describe similar items as furniture "with gilded sculptor's work." See Brigitte Langer and Alexander Herzog von Württemberg. Die deutschen Möbel des 16. bis 18. Jahrhunderts. Vol. 2 of Die Möbel der Residenz München, ed. Gerhard Hojer and Hans Ottomeyer. Kataloge der Kunstsammlungen/Bayrische Verwaltung der Staatlichen Schlösser, Gärten und Seen. Munich and New York, 1996, p. 205.[3] Heinrich Kreisel. Die Kunst des deutschen Möbels: Möbel und Vertäfelungen des deutschn Sprachraums von den Anfängen bis zum Jugendstil. Vol. 2, Spätbarock und Rokoko. 2nd ed. Rev. by Georg Himmelheber. Munich, 1983, p. 172.[4] In a conversation with the author, Josef Sieren, head of the painting and gilding workshop, Verwaltung der Staatlichen Schlössern, Nymphenburg, Munich, revealed that a pair of related commodes in the Archbishop's Palace in Munich retain such a finish. Details of this conversation are recorded in a note in the archives of the Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts, Metropolitan Museum.[5] Jean Laran. François de Cuvilliés: Dessinateur et architecte. Les grands ornemanistes. Oeuvres choisies. Paris, 1925, p. 8. Plate 65 shows a design for a writing desk ("secrétaire en tables pour Ecrire") of 1745-55 with a lean-to hinged fall front that could easily be mistaken for a rolltop mechanism. Roentgen must have seen this illustration, for he started about 1760 to produce similar desks, first with fall fronts and then with the fashionable rolltop variant. On rolltop desks, see Fabian 1996, pp. 100-102, nos. 214-19; for the hinged fall-front type, see pp. 95-99, nos. 202-12.[6] File note of 24 October 1994 by Afra Schick in the archives of the Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts; see also Jean Laran. François de Cuvilliés: Dessinateur et architecte. Les grands ornemanistes. Oeuvres choisies. Paris, 1925, p. 8, pls. 32-35 (commode designs).[7] Jean Laran. François de Cuvilliés: Dessinateur et architecte. Les grands ornemanistes. Oeuvres choisies. Paris, 1925, pp. 9, 77.[8] Adolf Feulner and Preston Remington. "Examples of South German Woodwork in the Metropolitan Museum." In Metropolitan Museum Studies 2, pt. 2 (1930), pp. 152-70; Adolf Feulner. "Eine Kommode nach Entwurf von Cuvilliés." In Festschrift zum sechzigsten Geburtstage von E.W. Braun, pp. 167-69. Anzeiger des Landesmuseums in Troppau 2. Augsburg, 1931; Afra Schick. "Möbel nach Entwürfen von François de Cuvilliés D.Ä." Münchner Jahrbuch der bildenden Kunst, 3rd ser., 49 (1998), pp. 123-62; and Jean Laran. François de Cuvilliés: Dessinateur et architecte. Les grands ornemanistes. Oeuvres choisies. Paris, 1925, pl. 22 (left), for a related motif.[9] File note of 24 October 1994 by Afra Schick in the archives of the Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts; see also Brigitte Langer. Die Möbel der Schlösser Nymphenburg and Schleissheim. Munich, London, and New York, 2000, pp. 130-36.[10] Hasso von Poser. Johann Joachim Dietrich und der Hochaltar zu Diessen. Munich, 1975, pp. 123-24.[11] Heinrich Kreisel. Die Kunst des deutschen Möbels: Möbel und Vertäfelungen des deutschn Sprachraums von den Anfängen bis zum Jugendstil. Vol. 2, Spätbarock und Rokoko. 2nd ed. Rev. by Georg Himmelheber. Munich, 1983, p. 178; and catalogue of a sale at Sotheby's, London, 13 December 2000, p. 34, lot 36.[12] Adolf Feulner. "Eine Kommode nach Entwurf von Cuvilliés." In Festschrift zum sechzigsten Geburtstage von E.W. Braun, pp. 167-69. Anzeiger des Landesmuseums in Troppau 2. Augsburg, 1931, figs. 2, 3. For Schloss Kefering, see Bezirksamt Regensburg. Kunstdenkmäler von Oberpfalz & Regensburg 21. Munich, 1910, pp. 95-96, fig. 59.[13] Lerchenfeld Palace takes its name not from one of the thirteen different owners this stately home has had during its history but, strangely enough, from a Lerchenfeld family member who merely lived nearby in the early nineteenth century; Erich Scheibmayr. Wer? Wann? Wo? Persönlichkeiten in Münchner Friedhöfen. Munich, 1989, p. 577.[14] Pantheon 2 (1928), copy of an advertisement in the archives of the Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts. It was acquired by the Museum from Adolph Loewi (1888-1977), a Bernheimer relative resident in Venice; on this collector and dealer, see Olga Raggio. The Gubbio Studiolo and Its Conservation. Vol. I, Federico da Montefeltro's Palace at Gubbio and Its Studiolo. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 1999, pp. 4-7, 180, n. 13.[15] The purchase price was 23,000 reichmarks, according to an annotated copy of the auction catalogue, now in a private New York collection. They were offered again at auction in 2000 and in 2005; catalogues of sales at Sotheby's, London, 13 December 2000, lot 36, and 8 June 2005, lot 33 (the present commode is illustrated in both catalogues). In 1927 the Museum acquired from the Hirth Collection a pair of Rococo doors that may have come from the Munich Residenz (acc. nos. 27.184.2-11).[16] These four commodes are discussed at length in Afra Schick. "Möbel nach Entwürfen von François de Cuvilliés D.Ä." Münchner Jahrbuch der bildenden Kunst, 3rd ser., 49 (1998), pp. 123-62. The pair in the Archbishop's Palace is in an exceptionally good state of preservation; see n. 4 above.[17] On different color schemes for Munich Rococo furniture, see Brigitte Langer. Die Möbel der Schlösser Nymphenburg and Schleissheim. Munich, London, and New York, 2000, pp. 130-36, 166, no. 52.[18] Wolf-Dieter Grimm. Bildatlas wichtiger Denkmalgesteine der Bundesrepublik Deutschland. With contributions by Ninon Ballerstädt et al. Arbeitsheft (Bayerisches Landesamt für Denkmalpflege) 50. Munich, 1990, no. 177. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3642184 Textile Fragment. Dimensions: Textile: L. 23 1/2 in. (59.7 cm) W. 18 3/16 in. (46.2 cm)Mount: L. 29 1/2 in. (74.9 cm)W. 24 in. (61 cm) Wt. 10 lbs. (4.5 kg). Date: ca. 1540.This velvet fragment is said to have once formed part of the interior of a tent used by Kara Mustapha Pasha during the second Ottoman siege of Vienna in 1683. The tent probably was captured from the Turkish army as war booty. These types of Safavid velvets were also used for furnishings, cushions, and ceremonial robes, and were produced in a royal workshop in Tabriz. The Safavid court favored figurative velvets that depicted hunting, a recreational passion of Persian royalty, or, in some cases, scenes from poetic texts. This fragment features a recurring motif--a young hero hurling a rock at a dragon, watched by two birds on a nearby tree. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3644796 Charles I. Artist: After an engraving of by Wenceslaus Hollar (Bohemian, Prague 1607-1677 London). Culture: British. Dimensions: H. 6 x W. 4 1/2 inches (15.2 x 11.4 cm). Date: 1650-70.This miniature portrait of Charles I is one of the most technically accomplished examples of professional seventeenth-century needlework. In addition to this miniature, other examples include: two in the Victoria and Albert Museum, one in the Wallace Collection in London, one in Rosenborg Castle in Copenhagen, and one in the collection of John H. Bryan, which is housed in a silver-gilt frame engraved with the royal armorial and date of Charles's execution, 30 January 1648 (old calendar). Like a painting in silk thread, this miniature represents the merging of two English artistic traditions--a naturalistic rendering of faces using fine techniques such as split stitch, which had been in use in England since the twelfth century, and the painted miniature portrait, a courtly fashion that began during the reign of Henry VIII.The king's likeness has been taken with great fidelity from a 1641 etching by Wenceslaus Hollar, which was itself ultimately derived from a chain of different prints based on a painted portrait by Anthony van Dyck of Charles I and his consort, Henrietta Maria, painted in 1632. Oliver Millar has noted that van Dyck's painting is in itself a reworking of the original composition by Daniel Mytens of ca. 1630-32, in the Royal Collection, Hampton Court Palace.The embroidery is contained within a glazed silver frame with molded edges and a suspension loop at the top, flanked on either side by a spiral ribbon cresting. The glass has beveled edges, and its various imperfections and minute air bubbles suggest that it is original to the period. An example of what Daphne Foskett calls a "cabinet miniature," it was intended to be mounted in a cabinet or placed on a table.The bust of Charles is slightly raised from the flat gray-green satin background, an effect produced by the portrait's having been stitched on satin. The king's characteristic hairstyle, pointed beard, and upturned moustache are convincingly shaded in various tones of brown, brown-red, and light blond threads. Strands of hair are worked directly on the satin, with the raised portion skillfully merged into the background. The cheeks and jawline are also enhanced by shadowy tones that suggest both stubble and facial bone structure. Each thread is worked in a virtuoso technique that varies the stitch length, tension, and twist in such a way as to manipulate the play of light over the silk fibers. The intensity of detail can be grasped in a number of passages, such as Charles's right eye, which is created from an amalgam of minute stitches. One can see under magnification that the lower lid is outlined by a minute pink thread, couched down, and worked over by a mass of flesh-toned silk. The iris is laid down in several shades of blue thread, separated from the black pupil by a lighter couching thread, which not only suggests depth by pulling the other threads around the pupil, but also creates the catch-light that defines Charles's expression.The extraordinarily developed detail of this and the other, similar miniature portraits of the king led at one time to their being dated to the later eighteenth century, when interest in the cult of the martyred king was still strong. J.L. Nevinson, however, demonstrated the use of such techniques in other works that can be firmly placed in the period between 1650 and the end of the seventeenth century, including an embroidered bookbinding with a detailed portrait of a youth now in the Houghton Library at Harvard University that contains a copy of Hopkins's Psalms dated 1648. It is likely then that the miniature was produced in the second half of the seventeenth century, either before or, as Nevinson posited, in the years immediately following the Restoration and is thus part of the imagery associated with the cult of the Royal Martyr.The link with the cult of Charles the Martyr is made explicit by the embroidered inscription, a quotation from Psalm 18, which associates Charles directly with the Old Testament patriarch King David: "Deus meus est Rvpis mea Psa: 18." The reference is to Psalm 18:2-3, which invokes God's protection against his enemies: "The Lord is my rock, and my fortress, and my deliverer; my God, my strength in whom I will trust; my buckler, and the horn of my salvation, and my high tower. I will call upon the lord, who is worthy to be praised: so shall I be saved from mine enemies." Although the connection between contemporary monarchs and King David was a commonplace one, the specific association made here, of Charles I with the Psalms of King David, assumed a central importance in his posthumous cult. It drew from that most popular of all commemorative works, the literary "self-portrait" of the martyred king, the Eikon Basilike, a book notionally containing Charles Stuart's own apologia for his life and reign, which, with its inclusion of the king's favorite prayers and psalms, offered a kind of spiritual autobiography. Both the prayers and the meditations of the Eikon Basilike explicitly echo the Psalms of David. Indeed, the embroidered image is taken directly from a print that serves as the frontispiece of the Reliquiae Sacrae Carolinae of 1651, an expanded edition of the king's works with a bound-in 1649 version of the Eikon Basilike. As Elizabeth Wheeler has shown, the "repeated evocation of the Psalms, the emphasis on conscience, the insistence on the depth and sorrow of his sufferings" found in this work all presented a figure intimately accessible to ordinary laymen and women.This intimacy was reflected in small-scale portraits like the present example and other small commemorative objects that were made in the years immediately after the king's execution. They reflect, too, the peculiarly private aspect of mourning for the king that characterized the ten-year period before the Restoration, during which time there were few permitted outlets for public grief. As Lois Potter has suggested, this circumstance conditioned the nature of the ensuing cult of the martyred king and in particular stimulated the production of such small, intimate kinds of memorial art. The inclusion of the scriptural inscription explicitly offered up the image of the martyred king as a spiritual model. The tradition that the monarch's own hair was worked into the image would have further emphasized the character of a relic. A number of such objects are recorded in the former collection of Percival D. Griffiths. A poem by Jeremiah Wells (1646-1679), written in reaction to an analogous small-scale portrait of Charles drawn in ink on parchment, which he saw in the library of St. John's College, Oxford, in 1665, vividly conveys the ecstatic emotions such portraits could summon up. In the latter portrait, the identification of Charles with King David is made literally indelible, for the lines of the face and hair are rendered in minute script that supposedly contain the whole Book of Psalms, or at least the Penitential Psalms. In a manuscript draft of the poem (later amended), Wells begins: "Wash thy impure feet, and trembling trace / With wary steps this more than sacred place." The first stanza of the published version continues in similarly hyperbolic fashion, mystically equating the king's body with the divine word:"With double reverence we approach to lookOn what's at once a picture and a book:Nor think it Superstition to adoreA king made now more sacred then before .The object here's Majestick and divine,Divinity does Majesty enshrine ."A portrait of the playwright Thomas Killigrew, painted by William Shephard one year after the king's execution, when Killigrew was in Venice as the political agent of the exiled Charles II, provides visual evidence, similarly rhetorical, as to how such images of the king were used. Killigrew sits at his desk with a (somewhat larger) portrait of Charles I on the wall behind him. He adopts a classic attitude of melancholy, which in other circumstances might have signified merely his own creative temperament, but which in this context may be taken to connote a stoical, philosophical grief for the executed king. His loyalty to the Stuart cause is further underlined by the copy of the Eikon Basilike that lies beneath the pile of his own plays. It is easy to imagine the embroidered portrait miniature eliciting similar kinds of response.[Jonathan Tavares and Andrew Morrall, adapted from English Embroidery from The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1580-1700: 'Twixt Art and Nature / Andrew Morrall and Melinda Watt ; New Haven ; London : Published for The Bard Graduate Center for Studies in the Decorative Arts, Design, and Culture, New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York [by] Yale University Press, 2008.]. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3665656 Dish with cover (Écuelle). Culture: French, Moustiers. Dimensions: Width: 11 in. (27.9 cm). Maker: Olérys Factory (French, established Moustiers, 1738). Date: ca. 1745-50.Faience, or tin-glazed and enameled earthenware, first emerged in France during the sixteenth century, reaching widespread usage among elite patrons during the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, prior to the establishment of soft-paste porcelain factories. Although characterized as more provincial in style than porcelain, French faience was used at the court of Louis XIV as part of elaborate meals and displays, with large-scale vessels incorporated into the Baroque garden designs of Versailles. Earlier examples of French faience attest to the strong influence of maiolica artists from Italy. Later works demonstrate the ways in which cities such as Nevers, Rouen, Lyon, Moustiers, and Marseille developed innovative vessel shapes and decorative motifs prized among collectors throughout Europe.While faience can be created from a wide mixture of clays, it is foremost distinguished by the milky opaque white color achieved by the addition of tin oxide to the glaze. French faience is typically divided into two types. Grand feu (high fire) describes pieces that have been decorated with glaze and metallic oxides before being fired a single time at a high temperature of around 1650°F (900°C). Petit feu (low-fire) faience, developed in the second half of the eighteenth century, refers to a process whereby the clay body is fired before being glazed and decorated with metallic oxides and then fired again at a lower temperature; pieces can also go through a third firing. Grand feu pieces have a more limited color palette that consists of blue, yellow, brown-purple, and green. By contrast, the lower firing temperature of petit feu faience enabled both greater precision in painting techniques and variety in the range of colors. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3667650 Jardinière. Culture: French, Rouen. Dimensions: Overall: 4 5/16 × 8 1/4 × 4 1/8 in. (11 × 21 × 10.5 cm). Factory: Levavasseur. Date: ca. 1775.Faience, or tin-glazed and enameled earthenware, first emerged in France during the sixteenth century, reaching widespread usage among elite patrons during the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, prior to the establishment of soft-paste porcelain factories. Although characterized as more provincial in style than porcelain, French faience was used at the court of Louis XIV as part of elaborate meals and displays, with large-scale vessels incorporated into the Baroque garden designs of Versailles. Earlier examples of French faience attest to the strong influence of maiolica artists from Italy. Later works demonstrate the ways in which cities such as Nevers, Rouen, Lyon, Moustiers, and Marseille developed innovative vessel shapes and decorative motifs prized among collectors throughout Europe.While faience can be created from a wide mixture of clays, it is foremost distinguished by the milky opaque white color achieved by the addition of tin oxide to the glaze. French faience is typically divided into two types. Grand feu (high fire) describes pieces that have been decorated with glaze and metallic oxides before being fired a single time at a high temperature of around 1650°F (900°C). Petit feu (low-fire) faience, developed in the second half of the eighteenth century, refers to a process whereby the clay body is fired before being glazed and decorated with metallic oxides and then fired again at a lower temperature; pieces can also go through a third firing. Grand feu pieces have a more limited color palette that consists of blue, yellow, brown-purple, and green. By contrast, the lower firing temperature of petit feu faience enabled both greater precision in painting techniques and variety in the range of colors. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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dpa7413596 (dpa) - The picture shows a reproduction of two bonds from 1924 (L) and 1930 at the start of a press conference in Frankfurt, Germany, 19 April 2005. The bonds were sold in particular to US citizens in the 1920s to finance the German reparations from the First World War. US investors and the controversial lawyer now want to sue the German government at the Federal Court in Florida for the repayment of 7,853 billion us-dollars. The majority of the so-called 'gold bonds' were bought back by the German government many years ago, however there were still bonds on the market according to the German news magazine 'Der Spiegel'.
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alb3614224 Plate with David Anointed by Samuel. Culture: Byzantine. Dimensions: Overall: 10 1/2 x 1 1/2 in., 47.1oz. (26.6 x 3.8 cm, 1334g)foot: 4 13/16 x 1/2 in. (12.2 x 1.3 cm). Date: 629-630.In 628-29 the Byzantine emperor Herakleios (r. 610-41) successfully ended a long, costly war with Persia and regained Jerusalem, Egypt, and other Byzantine territory. Silver stamps dating to 613-29/30 on the reverse of these masterpieces place their manufacture in Herakleios's reign. The biblical figures on the plates wear the costume of the early Byzantine court, suggesting to the viewer that, like Saul and David, the Byzantine emperor was a ruler chosen by God. Elaborate dishes used for display at banquets were common in the late Roman and early Byzantine world; generally decorated with classical themes, these objects conveyed wealth, social status, and learning. This set of silver plates may be the earliest surviving example of the use of biblical scenes for such displays. Their intended arrangement may have closely followed the biblical order of the events, and their display may have conformed to the shape of a Christogram, or monogram for the name of Christ.The prophet Samuel, recognizing David as God's chosen one, anoints him (1 Samuel 16:13). David's father, Jesse, and two of his brothers watch. The calf, knife, and altar below Samuel refer to the sacrifice he was supposed to offer in Bethlehem (1 Samuel 16:1-3); the ram and staff below David signify his role as keeper of his family's flock (1 Samuel 16:11). Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3667138 Plate with David's Confrontation with Eliab. Culture: Byzantine. Dimensions: Overall: 5 1/2 x 7/8 in., 13.4oz. (14 x 2.3 cm, 380g)foot: 2 1/2 x 5/16 in. (6.4 x 0.8 cm). Date: 629-630.In 628-29 the Byzantine emperor Herakleios (r. 610-41) successfully ended a long, costly war with Persia and regained Jerusalem, Egypt, and other Byzantine territory. Silver stamps dating to 613-29/30 on the reverse of these masterpieces place their manufacture in Herakleios's reign. The biblical figures on the plates wear the costume of the early Byzantine court, suggesting to the viewer that, like Saul and David, the Byzantine emperor was a ruler chosen by God. Elaborate dishes used for display at banquets were common in the late Roman and early Byzantine world; generally decorated with classical themes, these objects conveyed wealth, social status, and learning. This set of silver plates may be the earliest surviving example of the use of biblical scenes for such displays. Their intended arrangement may have closely followed the biblical order of the events, and their display may have conformed to the shape of a Christogram, or monogram for the name of Christ.While the theme of the set of plates is clear, the subject of each individual plate is sometimes difficult to determine. The scene here has been identified as showing David's eldest brother, Eliab, accusing David of neglecting his duty as a shepherd to watch the battle with Goliath (1 Samuel 17:28-30). It may also portray Goliath's challenge to David (1 Samuel 17:41-45) or David's meeting with the Egyptian soldier (1 Samuel 30:11-15). Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3673968 Mirror. Culture: German, Augsburg. Dimensions: Overall: 78 7/8 × 39 3/4 in. (200.3 × 101 cm). Silversmith: Johann Valentin Gevers (German, ca. 1662-1732); Medallions possibly by Johann Andreas Thelot (German, 1655-1734). Date: ca. 1710.This sumptuous mirror beautifully evokes the wealth of silver furnishings at the Versailles of Louis XIV (1638-1715) and, to a lesser extent, at other European Baroque palaces.[1] Well documented in contemporary descriptions, the 167 pieces of silver furniture in Louis's state rooms, as counted by a Swedish architect, Nicodemus Tessin the Younger (1654-1728), were mostly made at the Manufacture Royale des Meubles de la Couronne at the Hôtel des Gobelins, in Paris.[2] Symbolizing the glory and magnificence of the Sun King, this opulent furniture astonished and dazzled all who saw it. Foreign rulers sought to emulate the example set by Louis, and long after his silver furniture had been melted down to pay for his military campaigns, similar costly pieces were still ordered for the state apartments of princely and other aristocratic residences all over Europe.One of the most important centers for working precious metals was the German city of Augsburg, and many of the pieces of silver furniture known today originated there. Unlike the furnishings executed for Louis XIV, which were nearly all made of solid silver, the objects executed in Augsburg consisted of a wooden core covered by thin silver plates. Augsburg silversmiths also supplied silver and silver-gilt mounts for the embellishment of luxurious objects veneered with tortoiseshell and tinted ivory, such as the Museum's mirror.The pronounced geometric projections of the mirror's colorful frame are typical of the South German Baroque. The feature seems to have been particularly fashionable in Augsburg, as is seen in the stepped stands of clock cases, altars, and cabinets that were also executed there. The elaborate silver and silver-gilt mounts, however, rendered in a strictly symmetrical manner, are French in character. The volutes, bandwork, acanthus foliage, tasseled lambrequin motifs, fruit and flower baskets, birds, masks, and drapery ornament appear to have been inspired by the designs of the influential French architect Jean Bérain (1638/39-1711). Bérain's decorative style was disseminated abroad by Huguenot craftsmen who left France in 1685 after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes. Jeremias Wolff (1663/73-1724) and other Augsburg publishers sold pirated copies of Bérain's designs during the late seventeenth century and early eighteenth century. In addition, many German silversmiths had spent several years of training abroad, often in Paris, and foreign journeymen came to work in Augsburg, stimulating the exchange of ideas and adoption of new styles.Marks on the silver-gilt lambrequin suspended from the elaborately decorated crest and overlapping the top of the mirror's frame (fig. 48) identify it as the work of the Augsburg silversmith Johann Valentin Gevers and date it between 1708 and 1710.[3] Gevers was most likely also responsible for the seated allegorical figures of Prudence with a mirror and snake, on the right, and Temperance holding calipers and a bridle, on the left, as well as for the rest of the silver crest decoration. This work suggests that Gevers was familiar with Bérain's designs.The four silver medallions with scenes in relief, however, were probably not executed by Gevers. They are in the style of Johann Andreas Thelot, an Augsburg silversmith known for his figural reliefs, and may have originated in his workshop.[4] It would not have been the first time that works of these silversmiths were used together. A magnificent Augsburg altar clock on table-stand in the Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, Munich, for instance, also combines mounts by Gevers with reliefs by Thelot.[5] The cartouche-shaped medallions that flank the top of the mirror glass depict a courting couple dressed according to the fashion of the French aristocracy during the 1690s (see fig. 49). The pair of medallions below may represent two of the continents. The one on the right with a crown, a scepter, and a horse as her attributes is probably Europe. The treasure chest and camels in the background of the left medallion may indicate that Asia is depicted. It is unusual to find two rather than all four continents represented in a decorative scheme. Perhaps this mirror originally had a pair that was embellished with representations of America and Africa. If so, the crest of the pair may have displayed the allegorical figures of Justice and Fortitude, which, together with Temperance and Prudence found on this piece, would have represented the four Cardinal Virtues.Pieces of engraved glass are inserted in the superstructure and the lower part of the frame. The largest of them is in the form of a lambrequin with a silver-gilt, fringed, and tasseled border and is mounted on the mirror's cresting, underneath the baldachin-shaped top. Probably resilvered, this section is engraved with a female bust crowned with laurel leaves and surrounded by a laurel wreath and palm branches.The wooden core of the mirror was first veneered with tortoiseshell and ivory and then set with pieces of glass according to contemporary practice. To enhance the color of the tortoiseshell, derived from sea turtles, a layer of gold leaf was applied underneath, and additional spots were painted on the inside to increase its mottled effect. Tinted green, the ivory was probably colored with verdigris using a technique described in manuals of the period.[6] Tiny nails, many of them now missing, were used to fasten the silver mounts to the frame. The plain strips of silver were not nailed but placed directly on a wooden molding from which they received their form. A mold, or perhaps a special rolling device, was used to shape and pattern the gadrooned and decorated bands of silver.[7] They were not directly attached to the wooden molding underneath; instead, a layer of resin mixed with glue was applied in between. By pressing the thin pieces of silver on this adhesive layer, the motifs were imprinted in the underlying mixture as well. Some of these silver bands were originally gilded. Much of this has been lost through repeated polishing, but traces are still visible in certain areas that are hard to clean.It was the specialty of a certain type of cabinetmaker, referred to as Silberschreiner or Silberkistler, to veneer the surface of furniture with tortoiseshell, ivory, and occasionally semiprecious stones.[8] Since this type of furniture was extremely costly, it was generally only made to order through an agent, or Silberhändler, who served as middleman between the patron and the various artists involved. The agents submitted designs for approval to the client, selected the silversmith to whom they supplied the necessary silver, and chose the Silberschreiner, who mounted the different elements together on a wooden core. In addition, the agents were responsible for the packing and shipping of the finished objects and for all the financial aspects involved.Although it bears some resemblance to a mirror now in the Severoceské Museum in Liberec, Czech Republic, nothing is known about the early history of the Metropolitan Museum's mirror.[9] During the twentieth century it was, for a considerable time, with the Parisian antiques dealership established by Jacques Seligmann (1858-1923). When the firm lent it to the "Chefs-d'oeuvre de la curiosité du monde" exposition in Paris in 1954,[10] it was described as "the single piece of goldsmith's work most commented on in the exhibition."[11] Subsequently in private hands, this splendid example of German Baroque furniture was offered for sale in 1988,[12] and the Museum acquired it the following year.[Daniëlle Kisluk-Grosheide 2006]Footnotes:[1] The text of this entry is adapted from an entry by the present author in "Recent Acquisitions" 1990, pp. 26-27; and from Kisluk-Grosheide 1991.[2] Hernmarck 1953, pp. 113-14; Buckland 1983, pp. 271-79, 283; and Buckland 1989.[3] Seling 1980, vol. 3, pp. 23, 291.[4] Praël-Himmer 1978, pp. 42-45, 70-71, nos. 38, 39, 80, figs. 37-40, 42-45, 81-83.[5] Illustrated in Seling 1980, vol. 1, p. 349, no. 1077, and vol. 2, fig. 1077.[6] Kunst- und Werck-Schul 1707, p. 1314.[7] Brandner et al. 1976, p. 60; and Rudolph 1999.[8] The silver turner Joh. Christoph Rembold described the practice of these craftsmen in letters he sent to the Augsburg goldsmiths' guild between 1699 and 1705: The silver turner Joh. Christoph Rembold described the practice of these craftsmen in letters he sent to the Augsburg goldsmiths' guild between 1699 and 1705: "[They] let the goldsmiths make plate with which they then veneer and cover all kinds of mirror frames, wall sconces, guéridons, tables, chairs, caskets, and writing cabinets, etc. They decorate such [objects] also with solid foliage, images, and many mounted stones"; ([Sie] lassen die Goldschmide bleche schlagen, Fourniren und überdeken hernach damit allerhand Spiegel Ramen, Wandleuchter, Gueridons, Tische, Sessel, Trühlen und Schreibkasten etc. Zieren auch solche mit Massivem Laubwerk, bildern und villen gefassten Steinen); quoted in Rathke-Köhl 1964, p. 60, n. 223.[9] Discussed and illustrated in Kisluk-Grosheide 1991, pp. 4, 15, figs. 17, 18.[10] Chefs-d'oeuvre de la curiosité du monde 1954, no. 306, pl. 145.[11] "la pièce d'orfèvrerie la plus commentée de l'exposition"; "La glace la plus extraordinaire" 1954, p. 67.[12] Allegedly, it was in the possession of J. Rossignol, whose family offered it for sale at Ader Picard Tajan, Paris, 17 March 1988, lot 87. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
DC

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