Plaster cast of terracotta model by Artus Quellinus
Relief
after 1648 (designed), before 1885 (cast)
after 1648 (designed), before 1885 (cast)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This relief shows the figure of Apollo, with a python writhing beneath. It is is from the galleries leading to the Burgerzaal (the offices of government officials) at the Amsterdam Stadhuis, and is one of eight reliefs of the earth and planets depicted as Roman gods. These are considered to be among the most refined sculptures produced by Quellinus and his assistants. This cast, acquired in exchange with the Museum of Industrial Arts, Haarlem, was taken from a terracotta design for this sculpture, which is now in the collection of the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Title | Plaster cast of terracotta model by Artus Quellinus (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | Plaster cast |
Brief description | Relief showing figure of Apollo, with a squirming python at the base. A copy from the model in terracotta of the decoration by Artus Quellinus for the Stadhuis, Amsterdam. 19th-century plaster cast after 17th-century Dutch original. |
Physical description | Relief showing figure of Apollo, with a python at the base |
Dimensions |
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Styles | |
Object history | This cast, acquired in exchange with the Museum of Industrial Arts, Haarlem, was taken from a terracotta design for this sculpture, which is now in the collection of the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam. Historical significance: The building was praised as 'the eighth wonder of the world', by the poet Joost van den Vondel in his epitaph for van Campen (Schoten 2010, 5). 'This collection of terracotta models and studies is quite exceptional in its size, variety and artistic quality; taken in conjunction with the sculpture in and on the building and the original bills and accounts, it provides a rare look behind the scenes in an eminent seventeenth-century sculptor's workshop' (Schoten 2010, 6). |
Historical context | Artus Quellinus (1609-1668) is considered to be the greatest Flemish sculptor of the Baroque period. His sculpture was strongly influenced by Northern classicism, and his nude sculptures reveal his familiarity with the art of Peter Paul Rubens, and that of the sculptural school which surrounded him, including the artists Hans van Mildert and Lucas Faydherbe. After early training with his father, Erasmus Quellinus (1584-1640), in 1634 he travelled to Italy to work in the studio of François du Quesnoy (1594-1643), a Flemish sculptor working in Rome. Quellinus returned to Antwerp by 1639, and in 1648, he was commissioned to design decorations for the façades, walls, ceilings, and chimney pieces of the new Amsterdam Stadhius (now the Royal Palace), which was constructed by the architect Jacob van Campen (1595-1657). Quellinus’ assistants included Rombout Berhults, Gabriel Grupello, Bartolomeus Eggers, and Artus Quellinus II, his first cousin. The Amsterdam city council envisioned that the Dam Square surrounding the new Stadhuis would rival the Campus Martius in ancient Rome and the Piazza San Marco in Venice in physical grandeur. The paintings and sculptures in the Stadhuis would represent allegorical glorifications of Amsterdam’s republican-minded government, and they would be based on the Bible and on texts by Livy and Cicero. Schoten writes that Quellinus’ programme symbolised ‘peace, prosperity, and Amsterdam’s pivotal position in the world’ (2010, 15). The present sculpture is from the galleries leading to the Burgerzaal (the offices of government officials), and is one of eight reliefs of the earth and planets depicted as Roman gods. These are considered to be among the most refined sculptures produced by Quellinus and his assistants. |
Production | 19th-century plaster cast after 17th-century Dutch original |
Subjects depicted | |
Summary | This relief shows the figure of Apollo, with a python writhing beneath. It is is from the galleries leading to the Burgerzaal (the offices of government officials) at the Amsterdam Stadhuis, and is one of eight reliefs of the earth and planets depicted as Roman gods. These are considered to be among the most refined sculptures produced by Quellinus and his assistants. This cast, acquired in exchange with the Museum of Industrial Arts, Haarlem, was taken from a terracotta design for this sculpture, which is now in the collection of the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam. |
Associated objects | |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | REPRO.1885-40 |
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Record created | June 24, 2009 |
Record URL |
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