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Wrestling matches between scantily clad women as well as men were a form of court entertainment in 17th-century Italy. Casts of "Two Women Wrestling" were sometimes paired with "Two Men Wrestling." The subject of women wrestling is not ancient, and a life-size statue would shock, but the naturalism, drama, and veiled eroticism are suited to the small scale appropriate to a collector's study. It exemplifies the impact of the tastes of the collector on the expanded subject matter of the Baroque. The natural tension of the conflict leads the eye around the wrestlers.Chief sculptor to the grand duke of Tuscany, Tacca maintained the Florentine workshop that had been Giovanni Bologna's (see Allegory of Architecture 54.689), adapting the svelte, complex, elongated figures of the latter and his father Pietro Tacca (1577-1640) to the demands of greater drama in the mid to later 1600s. No small bronzes are documented as having been created by him, but several are attributed to him by comparison with larger, signed pieces.

Page data

Page
1
Source index
0
Type
photo
Media ID
4587a1b4257784df
Size
unknown

Document data

ID
11380
Core
obj
Type
object
DTO data
{
    "id": "11380",
    "sourceUrl": "https://purl.thewalters.org/art/54.647",
    "contentType": "object",
    "stage": "normalized",
    "title": "Two Women Wrestling",
    "description": "Wrestling matches between scantily clad women as well as men were a form of court entertainment in 17th-century Italy. Casts of \"Two Women Wrestling\" were sometimes paired with \"Two Men Wrestling.\" The subject of women wrestling is not ancient, and a life-size statue would shock, but the naturalism, drama, and veiled eroticism are suited to the small scale appropriate to a collector's study. It exemplifies the impact of the tastes of the collector on the expanded subject matter of the Baroque. The natural tension of the conflict leads the eye around the wrestlers.Chief sculptor to the grand duke of Tuscany, Tacca maintained the Florentine workshop that had been Giovanni Bologna's (see Allegory of Architecture 54.689), adapting the svelte, complex, elongated figures of the latter and his father Pietro Tacca (1577-1640) to the demands of greater drama in the mid to later 1600s. No small bronzes are documented as having been created by him, but several are attributed to him by comparison with larger, signed pieces.",
    "provenance": "Jacques Seligmann, Paris, by purchase; Henry Walters, Baltimore, 1910, by purchase; Walters Art Museum, 1931, by bequest.",
    "date": "1675-1690 (Baroque)",
    "citationUrl": "https://purl.thewalters.org/art/54.647",
    "rightsUri": "CC0",
    "language": "en",
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    "imageCount": 1,
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    "source": "import",
    "dimensions": [
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        }
    ],
    "dimensionsRaw": "H: 15 1/4 × W: 7 3/16 × D: 7 5/16 in. (38.7 × 18.3 × 18.5 cm)"
}

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Document identity
{
    "localId": "11380",
    "label": "Two Women Wrestling",
    "core": "obj",
    "dtoType": "object",
    "citationUrl": "https://purl.thewalters.org/art/54.647"
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Document source metadata
{
    "id": "11380",
    "sourceUrl": "https://purl.thewalters.org/art/54.647",
    "contentType": "object",
    "stage": "normalized",
    "title": "Two Women Wrestling",
    "description": "Wrestling matches between scantily clad women as well as men were a form of court entertainment in 17th-century Italy. Casts of \"Two Women Wrestling\" were sometimes paired with \"Two Men Wrestling.\" The subject of women wrestling is not ancient, and a life-size statue would shock, but the naturalism, drama, and veiled eroticism are suited to the small scale appropriate to a collector's study. It exemplifies the impact of the tastes of the collector on the expanded subject matter of the Baroque. The natural tension of the conflict leads the eye around the wrestlers.Chief sculptor to the grand duke of Tuscany, Tacca maintained the Florentine workshop that had been Giovanni Bologna's (see Allegory of Architecture 54.689), adapting the svelte, complex, elongated figures of the latter and his father Pietro Tacca (1577-1640) to the demands of greater drama in the mid to later 1600s. No small bronzes are documented as having been created by him, but several are attributed to him by comparison with larger, signed pieces.",
    "provenance": "Jacques Seligmann, Paris, by purchase; Henry Walters, Baltimore, 1910, by purchase; Walters Art Museum, 1931, by bequest.",
    "date": "1675-1690 (Baroque)",
    "citationUrl": "https://purl.thewalters.org/art/54.647",
    "rightsUri": "CC0",
    "language": "en",
    "genreSpecific": [
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    "largeImageUrl": "https://art.thewalters.org/images/art/PL9_54.647_Fnt_BW.jpg",
    "imageCount": 1,
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        {
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        }
    ],
    "dimensionsRaw": "H: 15 1/4 × W: 7 3/16 × D: 7 5/16 in. (38.7 × 18.3 × 18.5 cm)"
}
Document source extras
{
    "med": "bronze",
    "creator_ids": [
        "6740"
    ],
    "collection_ids": [
        "BAR"
    ],
    "exhibition_ids": [
        "1994"
    ]
}
Page context
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