Blind Homer Led by the Genius of Poetry by Edward…
Meleager by Antonio Gai in the Metropolitan Museum…
Detail of Meleager by Antonio Gai in the Metropoli…
Detail of Meleager by Antonio Gai in the Metropoli…
Mother Ape by Camillo Mariani in the Metropolitan…
Detail of Mother Ape by Camillo Mariani in the Met…
Pair of Mirrored Double Doors in the Metropolitan…
A Muslim Pilgrim Learns a Lesson of Piety in the M…
Detail of A Muslim Pilgrim Learns a Lesson of Piet…
Marble Statue of Herakles Seated on a Rock in the…
Marble Statue of Herakles Seated on a Rock in the…
Marble Statue of Herakles Seated on a Rock in the…
Marble Torso of a Cuirassed Statue of a Roman Empe…
Marble Torso of a Cuirassed Statue of a Roman Empe…
Detail of the Marble Torso of a Cuirassed Statue o…
Detail of the Marble Torso of a Cuirassed Statue o…
Detail of the Marble Torso of a Cuirassed Statue o…
Detail of the Marble Torso of a Cuirassed Statue o…
Detail of the Marble Torso of a Cuirassed Statue o…
Detail of the Marble Torso of a Cuirassed Statue o…
Detail of the Marble Torso of a Cuirassed Statue o…
Bronze Portrait of Alexander the Great in the Metr…
Bronze Portrait of Alexander the Great in the Metr…
Cupid on a Lion by Van Beveren in the Metropolitan…
Japanese Buddhist Shrine in the Metropolitan Museu…
Japanese Buddhist Shrine in the Metropolitan Museu…
Japanese Buddhist Shrine in the Metropolitan Museu…
Saltcellar with Portuguese Figures from Benin in t…
Horn Blower from Benin in the Metropolitan Museum…
Admiral De Tourville by Marin in the Metropolitan…
Admiral De Tourville by Marin in the Metropolitan…
Detail of an Enthroned Virgin and Child in the Met…
Gold Plaque with a Masked Figure in the Metropolit…
Gold Funerary Mask in the Metropolitan Museum of A…
Double Bat-Head Figure Pendant in the Metropolitan…
Old Women of Arles from the Volpini Suite by Gaugu…
Old Women of Arles from the Volpini Suite by Gaugu…
Cypresses and Two Women by Van Gogh in the Metropo…
Cypresses and Two Women by Van Gogh in the Metropo…
Detail of a Winter Landscape with Working Figures…
Detail of a Winter Landscape with Working Figures…
Winter Landscape with Working Figures Drawing by V…
Winter Landscape with Working Figures Drawing by V…
Detail of Country Road in Provence by Night by Van…
Detail of Country Road in Provence by Night by Van…
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
113 visits
Cupid on a Lion by Van Beveren in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, January 2011


Title: Cupid on a lion
Artist: Mattheus van Beveren (Flemish, Antwerp ca. 1630–1690 Brussels)
Date: ca. 1675–90
Culture: Flemish
Medium: Statuette: ivory; base: wood, ebony and ivory
Dimensions: Height (statuette): 8 5/8 in. (21.9 cm); Height (base): 4 1/2 in. (11.4 cm)
Classification: Sculpture-Miniature
Credit Line: Purchase, Gift of Ogden Mills and Irwin Untermyer, by exchange, 1980
Accession Number: 1980.220a, b
he subject is an allegorical equation of the sort dear to the seventeenth century: the infant dynamo astride a lion is to be read as an emblem of Strength tamed by Love. The ivory's known history starts in 1884, when it was first recorded at Mentmore, the country house of the earls of Rosebery. It went almost unnoticed at the much-publicized Mentmore sale in 1977. Only in New York was it recognized as a work of the Antwerp sculptor Mattheus van Beveren. Van Beveren is a recent discovery, whose style has become discernible thanks to the publications of Christian Theuerkauff. The typical van Beveren child here, like those in an ivory Madonna in Amsterdam and in an ivory-and-ebony monument to James II at Windsor Castle, has concentrated piquant features, hair massed away from the face, and energetic gestures performed by tiny hands and feet made with technical virtuosity. Van Beveren and his shop also paid much attention to classical ornament, as seen on this base in the garlands and Cupid's crossed torches.
The contrast of materials was basic to Baroque sculpture in Antwerp, where van Beveren's peers employed black and white marbles, analogous to the ebony and ivory of the statuette and its base, in the making of tombs. This opposition underscores the dramatic message of the statuette, the most flamboyant Baroque ivory to enter our collection. A coarser version of the composition, minus the base, in the Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, Munich, can be traced to the eighteenth century—it was the property of Kurfürst Johann Wilhelm von der Pfalz in Düsseldorf by 1751—but it can only be described as a copy.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/206833
Artist: Mattheus van Beveren (Flemish, Antwerp ca. 1630–1690 Brussels)
Date: ca. 1675–90
Culture: Flemish
Medium: Statuette: ivory; base: wood, ebony and ivory
Dimensions: Height (statuette): 8 5/8 in. (21.9 cm); Height (base): 4 1/2 in. (11.4 cm)
Classification: Sculpture-Miniature
Credit Line: Purchase, Gift of Ogden Mills and Irwin Untermyer, by exchange, 1980
Accession Number: 1980.220a, b
he subject is an allegorical equation of the sort dear to the seventeenth century: the infant dynamo astride a lion is to be read as an emblem of Strength tamed by Love. The ivory's known history starts in 1884, when it was first recorded at Mentmore, the country house of the earls of Rosebery. It went almost unnoticed at the much-publicized Mentmore sale in 1977. Only in New York was it recognized as a work of the Antwerp sculptor Mattheus van Beveren. Van Beveren is a recent discovery, whose style has become discernible thanks to the publications of Christian Theuerkauff. The typical van Beveren child here, like those in an ivory Madonna in Amsterdam and in an ivory-and-ebony monument to James II at Windsor Castle, has concentrated piquant features, hair massed away from the face, and energetic gestures performed by tiny hands and feet made with technical virtuosity. Van Beveren and his shop also paid much attention to classical ornament, as seen on this base in the garlands and Cupid's crossed torches.
The contrast of materials was basic to Baroque sculpture in Antwerp, where van Beveren's peers employed black and white marbles, analogous to the ebony and ivory of the statuette and its base, in the making of tombs. This opposition underscores the dramatic message of the statuette, the most flamboyant Baroque ivory to enter our collection. A coarser version of the composition, minus the base, in the Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, Munich, can be traced to the eighteenth century—it was the property of Kurfürst Johann Wilhelm von der Pfalz in Düsseldorf by 1751—but it can only be described as a copy.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/206833
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.