Death as a drummer thumbnail 1
Death as a drummer thumbnail 2
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Europe 1600-1815, Room 7, The Sheikha Amna Bint Mohammed Al Thani Gallery

Death as a drummer

Statuette
ca. 1670-1680 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This exceptionally fine example of a freestanding ivory statuette has been convincingly attributed to the German artist Joachim Henne on the basis of its realism, drapery style, and technique of carving. Comparatively little is known of Henne’s life, including when and where he was born or died, or where he was trained. He worked in different centres in Germany and Denmark, specializing in small portrait reliefs and busts in ivory, though he also executed figure groups, and reliefs depicting mythological scenes. Although possibly from Jutland or North Germany, he may have trained in South Germany, in Ulm or Augsburg, and was active in Hamburg (1663-5), Gottorf (1665-7), and Copenhagen at the court of King Frederick III, and then under that of Frederick’s successor, King Christian V, from 1667 until 1691. He is thought to have travelled to Rome in 1691-2. From 1702-7 he is recorded as court miniature painter at the Brandenburg Court in Berlin, and he is also known to have worked in wood. This figure might date from c.1673, when Henne was in Copenhagen, although the dating is problematic, and it could be somewhat later. It is in a tradition which flourished particularly strongly in Germany from medieval times onwards, and especially in the 16th and 17th centuries. It could have been partly inspired by one of the figures in Hans Holbein's series of woodcuts of the Dance of Death, dating from 1538.
Figures of Death as mementi mori tied in with suggestions of the Fall of Man, and the fate of sinners. Henne was most active as a portraitist, although he also carved reliefs of religious and mythological subjects.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleDeath as a drummer (popular title)
Materials and techniques
Carved elephant ivory
Brief description
Statuette, ivory, of the skeletal figure of Death as a drummer, perhaps by Joachim Henne, northern German, ca. 1670-1680
Physical description
Carved ivory statuette of a skeleton or emaciated corpse-like figure, wearing a plumed hat, and swathed and beating a drum, which no longer survives.
Dimensions
  • Including base height: 27.5cm
  • Width: 13cm
  • Depth: 10cm
  • Base height: 2.7cm
  • Base width: 12.2cm
  • Base depth: 10cm
  • Ivory alone height: 23.5cm
Measured by SCP (LS) and SCP Conservation (CH) on 21 December 2012 for Europe 1600-1800.
Style
Gallery label
Death as a Drummer About 1670–80 This emaciated figure recalls the long-standing visual tradition of the Dance of Death. It was made to remind people of their own mortality, warning them to prepare for death and eternal judgement. The inexorable drumming of Death (who has here lost his drum) summoned all men, women and children, whatever their status in life, to their inevitable end. Germany Possibly by Joachim Henne Ivory(09.12.2015)
Object history
Bought for £10 10s in Paris in 1856 (vendor unrecorded).
Production
Previously considered to be Flemish.
Subjects depicted
Summary
This exceptionally fine example of a freestanding ivory statuette has been convincingly attributed to the German artist Joachim Henne on the basis of its realism, drapery style, and technique of carving. Comparatively little is known of Henne’s life, including when and where he was born or died, or where he was trained. He worked in different centres in Germany and Denmark, specializing in small portrait reliefs and busts in ivory, though he also executed figure groups, and reliefs depicting mythological scenes. Although possibly from Jutland or North Germany, he may have trained in South Germany, in Ulm or Augsburg, and was active in Hamburg (1663-5), Gottorf (1665-7), and Copenhagen at the court of King Frederick III, and then under that of Frederick’s successor, King Christian V, from 1667 until 1691. He is thought to have travelled to Rome in 1691-2. From 1702-7 he is recorded as court miniature painter at the Brandenburg Court in Berlin, and he is also known to have worked in wood. This figure might date from c.1673, when Henne was in Copenhagen, although the dating is problematic, and it could be somewhat later. It is in a tradition which flourished particularly strongly in Germany from medieval times onwards, and especially in the 16th and 17th centuries. It could have been partly inspired by one of the figures in Hans Holbein's series of woodcuts of the Dance of Death, dating from 1538.
Figures of Death as mementi mori tied in with suggestions of the Fall of Man, and the fate of sinners. Henne was most active as a portraitist, although he also carved reliefs of religious and mythological subjects.
Bibliographic references
  • Weber, Frederick Parkes. Aspects of death and correlated aspects of life in art, epigram and poetry; contributions towards an anthology and an iconography of the subject; illustrated especially by medals, engraved gems, jewels, ivories, antique pottery, &c. London : T.F. Unwin, ltd.; B. Quaritch, ltd., 1918, p. 63, fig. 6
  • Katalog der Kunst- und Kunstindustrie-Ausstellung alter und neuer deutscher Meister sowie der deutschen Kunstschulen im Glaspalaste zu München 1876, München : Wolf & Sohn, 1876 562
  • Inventory of Art Objects Acquired in the Year 1856. In: Inventory of the Objects in the Art Division of the Museum at South Kensington, Arranged According to the Dates of their Acquisition. Vol I. London: Printed by George E. Eyre and William Spottiswoode for H.M.S.O., 1868, p. 32.
  • Trusted, Marjorie, ed. The Making of Sculpture. The Materials and Techniques of European Sculpture. London: 2007, p. 121, plate 220
  • Longhurst, Margaret H. Catalogue of Carvings in Ivory. Part II. London: Victoria and Albert Museum, 1929, p. 88.
  • Kuhn, Dr. Katalog für die Ausstellung der Werke älterer Meister. Part II: Katalog der Kunst und Kunstindustrie-Ausstellung alter und neuer deutscher Meister. Munich, Glaspalast, 1876, cat.no. 562.
  • Theuerkauff, Christian, “Jakob Dobbermann und Joachim Hennen – Anmerkungen zu einigen Kleinbildwerken”, in: Alte und Moderne Kunst, 24. Jahrgang, 162, 1979, p. 26, fig. 32
  • Trusted, Marjorie, Baroque & Later Ivories, Victoria & Albert Museum, London, 2013, cat. no. 19
  • Beck, Herbert, and Bernhard Decker, Dürer's Verwandlung in der Skulptur Zwischen Renaissance und Barock, Frankfurt: Liebieghaus, 1982.
  • von Hülsen-Esch, Andrea & Westermann-Angerhausen, Hiltrud (eds.), Zum Sterben schön : Alter, Totentanz und Sterbekunst von 1550 bis heute, Köln : Museum Schnütgen, 2006 no.99
Collection
Accession number
2582-1856

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Record createdDecember 15, 2003
Record URL
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