Bust of a young woman
Relief
ca. 1480 (made)
ca. 1480 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Erhart probably made these two heads for a goldsmith, who would have used wooden models to design statuettes of precious metal. The present appearance as a bust is a later modification to appeal to collectors. This reflects the process by which models came to be valued as finished works in their own right.
He was probably trained in the Netherlands and the Upper Rhine and appears in the tax-rolls in Ulm in 1469, and became the leading sculptor there until his death in 1522. Most of his major works, for instance, the monochrome wood statues on the high altar of the Ulm Minster of about 1474-81, or the monumental stone figures for the Mount of Olives in front of the Minster do not survive. The busts of the choir-stalls in the Minster (about 1470), the Blaubeuren altarpiece (1493-94), and several small-scale sculptures do however give a clear picture of his contribution to the development of Late Gothic Sculpture in Ulm
He was probably trained in the Netherlands and the Upper Rhine and appears in the tax-rolls in Ulm in 1469, and became the leading sculptor there until his death in 1522. Most of his major works, for instance, the monochrome wood statues on the high altar of the Ulm Minster of about 1474-81, or the monumental stone figures for the Mount of Olives in front of the Minster do not survive. The busts of the choir-stalls in the Minster (about 1470), the Blaubeuren altarpiece (1493-94), and several small-scale sculptures do however give a clear picture of his contribution to the development of Late Gothic Sculpture in Ulm
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Bust of a young woman (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | Carved limewood |
Brief description | Bust, head of a young woman, carved limewood, by Michael Erhart, Germany (Swabia), Ulm, ca. 1480 |
Physical description | The bust has been re-cut at the shoulder to create the present bust form in the first half of the nineteenth century. |
Dimensions |
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Object history | The bust, together with the one of Adam, was used as a model in the workshop of the Ulm sculptor Michel Erhart. He was probably trained in the Netherlands and the Upper Rhine and appears in the tax-rolls in Ulm in 1469, and became the leading sculptor there until his death in 1522. Most of his major works, such as the monochrome wood statues on the high altar of the Ulm Minster of about 1474-81, or the monumental stone figures for the Mount of Olives in front of the Minster, do not survive. The busts of the choir-stalls in the Minster (about 1470), the Blaubeuren altarpiece (1493-94), and several small-scale sculptures do however give a clear picture of his contribution to the development of Late Gothic Sculpture in Ulm Historical significance: The bust is a excellent example for the creative process in a sculptor's workshop which became later an example of autonomous sculpture to be collected. New evidence has shown that the bust was part of a figure which entered the Kunstkammer of Rudolph II in 1609 when it was described together with the figure of Adam as "Zwy kunstlich von holtz geschnitzte bilder, Adam et Eva, hat der Hainhofer von Augsburg hierher kommen lassen und hat derselben Ihr Mt verehrt anno 1609, beisammen in einer Schubladen" (two virtuoso carving in wood, Adam and Eve which has Hainhofer from Augsburg given to her Majesty in the year 1609, both are preserved in a box) |
Historical context | The models were preparatory items for larger figures in the workshop used by him and and the workshop. Several larger pieces show close stylistic similarities. |
Production | Swabian |
Subject depicted | |
Summary | Erhart probably made these two heads for a goldsmith, who would have used wooden models to design statuettes of precious metal. The present appearance as a bust is a later modification to appeal to collectors. This reflects the process by which models came to be valued as finished works in their own right. He was probably trained in the Netherlands and the Upper Rhine and appears in the tax-rolls in Ulm in 1469, and became the leading sculptor there until his death in 1522. Most of his major works, for instance, the monochrome wood statues on the high altar of the Ulm Minster of about 1474-81, or the monumental stone figures for the Mount of Olives in front of the Minster do not survive. The busts of the choir-stalls in the Minster (about 1470), the Blaubeuren altarpiece (1493-94), and several small-scale sculptures do however give a clear picture of his contribution to the development of Late Gothic Sculpture in Ulm |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | 6995-1860 |
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Record created | February 16, 2004 |
Record URL |
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