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Source Description
This nude, bearded man holds a base for a candle socket in each of his outstretched hands, as in the etched illustration dated 1700 of a nearly identical "antique" Roman bronze figure in a collection of antiquities in Amsterdam. To the modern eye, the characterization of face and beard, proportions, and stance do not suggest ancient Greece or Rome but Germany around 1525, especially Nuremberg. The candlestick may be by the sculptor Peter Vischer the Younger, who, like his contemporary Albrecht Dürer, was involved in humanist circles there. While the nudity of the figure reflects the new, humanist respect for the beauty of the human body that looks back to the bronze statuettes of antiquity, the function of the figure is comparable to similar German candlesticks based on the figure of a soldier with outstretched arms. There was clearly no intention to deceive the initial purchaser, and it was only in the following century that such a figure could be mistaken for an antique. The base-made in the style favored in Padua in the mid 1500s-is also by Vischer, who had studied there.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
30782
label
""Antique"" Candlestick in the Form of a Man
core
obj
dtoType
object
citationUrl
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
30782
sourceUrl
contentType
object
stage
normalized
title
""Antique"" Candlestick in the Form of a Man
description
This nude, bearded man holds a base for a candle socket in each of his outstretched hands, as in the etched illustration dated 1700 of a nearly identical "antique" Roman bronze figure in a collection of antiquities in Amsterdam. To the modern eye, the characterization of face and beard, proportions, and stance do not suggest ancient Greece or Rome but Germany around 1525, especially Nuremberg. The candlestick may be by the sculptor Peter Vischer the Younger, who, like his contemporary Albrecht Dürer, was involved in humanist circles there. While the nudity of the figure reflects the new, humanist respect for the beauty of the human body that looks back to the bronze statuettes of antiquity, the function of the figure is comparable to similar German candlesticks based on the figure of a soldier with outstretched arms. There was clearly no intention to deceive the initial purchaser, and it was only in the following century that such a figure could be mistaken for an antique. The base-made in the style favored in Padua in the mid 1500s-is also by Vischer, who had studied there.
provenance
Henry Walters, Baltimore [date and mode of acquisition unknown]; Walters Art Museum, 1931, by bequest.
date
ca. 1525 (Renaissance)
citationUrl
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
Metal
candlesticks
imageCount
1
pageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
13 9/16 in. (34.5 cm)
Source extras
med
fire-gilded bronze, bronze
creator_ids
3274
collection_ids
REN
exhibition_ids
2192
3056
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
4980aed80e13dcff