Georg Tetzel the Older of Nuremberg
Medal
ca. 1552 (made)
ca. 1552 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This is a lead medal made by Joachim Deschler in Germany in 1552. The medal represents Georg Tetzel the Older of Nuremberg. This posthumous medal may have been commissioned by the family of Georg Tetzel to commemorate his youthful death 33 years earlier.
Joachim Deschler ((active 1532; d. ca. 1571), was a German sculptor, architect and medallist first based in Nuremberg. In 1547 he made a two-year study journey to Venice and Rome, from which he brought back numerous drawings and works of art. From the end of the 1550s Deschler lived in Vienna, where he was court sculptor for Maximilian. Deschler had an enormous output of medal art: 115 pieces are ascribed to him, and also several stone models.
Joachim Deschler ((active 1532; d. ca. 1571), was a German sculptor, architect and medallist first based in Nuremberg. In 1547 he made a two-year study journey to Venice and Rome, from which he brought back numerous drawings and works of art. From the end of the 1550s Deschler lived in Vienna, where he was court sculptor for Maximilian. Deschler had an enormous output of medal art: 115 pieces are ascribed to him, and also several stone models.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Georg Tetzel the Older of Nuremberg (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | Lead |
Brief description | Medal, lead, Georg Tetzel the Older of Nuremberg, by Joachim Deschler, Germany, ca. 1552 |
Dimensions |
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Object history | Provenance: Tross. 140 medals and reliefs were purchased from M. Henri Tross of Paris for £500 by J.C. Robinson for the Museum in 1867. |
Subjects depicted | |
Summary | This is a lead medal made by Joachim Deschler in Germany in 1552. The medal represents Georg Tetzel the Older of Nuremberg. This posthumous medal may have been commissioned by the family of Georg Tetzel to commemorate his youthful death 33 years earlier. Joachim Deschler ((active 1532; d. ca. 1571), was a German sculptor, architect and medallist first based in Nuremberg. In 1547 he made a two-year study journey to Venice and Rome, from which he brought back numerous drawings and works of art. From the end of the 1550s Deschler lived in Vienna, where he was court sculptor for Maximilian. Deschler had an enormous output of medal art: 115 pieces are ascribed to him, and also several stone models. |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | 77-1867 |
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Record created | February 24, 2004 |
Record URL |
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