Plaque with gazelles

Wilhelm Hunt Diederich American, born Hungary

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 774

Wilhelm Hunt Diederich was a Hungarian-born artist, whose American mother was the daughter of famed architect William Morris Hunt. He studied painting and sculpture both in the United States and abroad. Like many of his era, he embraced several media, most notably paper cutouts and metalwork. By 1916 he was also working in clay. Diederich particular favored chargers or large plates like this one that served as blank canvases for his energetic designs. They can be most characterized as highly charged silhouetted forms, in this case a stag and a dog, that echo his interest in a folk tradition of intricately cut paper popular in Austria and Switzerland. Typical of his designs in all media are the thin elegantly elongated bodies of the animals, which appear as highly expressive, almost whimsical forms. Diederich explored different traditions in clay, including a sgrafitto technique exposing the red earthenware clay with which he worked (see 1018.294.82), and that of sixteenth-century Italian majolica, which utilized colored oxides on a lighter ground, such as on this plaque.

Plaque with gazelles, Wilhelm Hunt Diederich (American (born Hungary), Szent-Grot 1884–1953 Tappan, New York), Earthenware, American

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