
Pair of Lions
Auction Closed
March 22, 07:15 PM GMT
Estimate
7,000 - 10,000 EUR
Lot Details
Description
German, Nuremberg, early 17th century
Pair of Lions
bronze
27.5 by 31cm., 10¾ by 12½in. each
Together with lot 62, these powerful bronze lions would have served to support a structure within a monument, such as a tomb or fountain, or perhaps as part of a grand collector’s cabinet. In their raised paws they would most likely have held now-lost coats of arms.
The richly curled manes and fierce grimaces exhibited by the beasts are imbued with a proto-Baroque spirit that is characteristic of Southern German bronze sculpture, influenced by the depiction of animals in Düreresque woodcuts. The stylised, voluminous rendering of the lions finds close parallels in works from Nuremberg, one of the primary centres of German bronze casting in the late Renaissance. Similarly stylised animals are found, for example, in table fountains by Benedikt Wurzelbauer, nephew of the famous founder Pankraz Labenwolf, who dominated bronze production in the Franconian city around 1600.
The present lot is the subject of an expertise by Prof. Dr. Detlef Heikamp.
This lot has been imported under a temporary artistic importation license. Please refer to the specialist department for further information about export procedures and shipping costs.
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