Price
£2200.00This object is eligible for a Certificate of BADA Provenance
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A Höchst Figure of Harlequin or Hanswurst with Bagpipe.
Modelled by Johann Gottfried Becker.
Circa 1750.
Incised ‘HH2’ and painter’s mark ‘B.’mark in black for Philipp Magnus Bechel.
The seated harlequin is playing a ‘dudelsack’ or bagpipe made from a billy goat.
The modeller Johann Gottfried Becker arrived from Meissen in 1746 just a year after Adam Friedrich von Löwenfinck had begun experiments at Höchst. Becker had been apprenticed to Johann Joachim Kändler at Meissen and this early figure is loosely based on Kändler’s Meissen model of 1736 without the tankard that that figure holds to his mouth. A similar model was also made at Fürstenberg.
Another example with very similar decoration is in Mittelrheinisches Landesmuseum in Mainz (inv. no. 36/29 b).
Condition:
Old restoration to tip of hat and back leg of goat and the section of pipe connecting the goat to the horn.
Provenance:
Christie’s Amsterdam, 15 May, 2002, lot 144.
References:
Reinhard Jansen (ed.), Commedia Dell’ Arte. Fest der Komödianten (2001), p. 147, no. 145.
Christina H. Nelson, The Warda Stevens Stout Collection, A History of Eighteenth-Century German Porcelain, The Dixon Gallery and Gardens, Memphis, (2013), pp. 279-82.
Patricia Stahl, Höchster Porzellan, 1746-1796. Katalog zur Ausstellung Höchster Porzellan (1994), Historisches Museum der Stadt Frankfurt am Main, p. 242, no. 6.7.12.
Dimensions
16.1 cm highThe BADA Standard
- Since 1918, BADA has been the leading association for the antiques and fine art trade
- Members are elected for their knowledge, integrity and quality of stock
- Our clients are protected by BADA’s code of conduct
- Our dealers’ membership is reviewed and renewed annually
- Bada.org is a non-profit site: clients deal directly with members and they pay no hidden fees