사자

Manufactory Meissen Manufactory German
ca. 1732
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 533
드레스덴에 있는 아우구스투스 2세의 일본식 궁전을 위해 주문된 대형자기 야수들은 18세기 도자기에 있어서 가장 야심찬 작업 중 하나였습니다. 자기에 이런 규모의 동물들을 묘사한 전례는 없었으며 이 사자 한 쌍에 있는 많은 구워진 금들은 이렇게 큰 상을 만들고 굽는 데 있어서의 기술적인 어려움을 반영합니다. 광택제의 푸르스름한 주조를 포함한 사소한 기술적인 결함이 있음에도 불구하고, 이 사자가 포함된 시리즈는 유럽에서 최초로 제작된 진정한 자기로서 독일 마이센 공장의 가장 위대한 성취 중 하나로 꼽힙니다.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • 제목: 사자
  • 아티스트: 따른 모델 요한 고틀리에프 키르히너 독일, 1706 – 1737년경
  • 연대: 1732년경
  • 지리: 마이센, 한 쌍 중 하나
  • 문화: 독일
  • 재료: 경질 자기
  • 크기: 53.3 × 83.2 × 34.3cm
  • 크레디트 라인: 라이츠먼 기금, 1988
  • 작품 번호: 1988.294.1
  • Curatorial Department: European Sculpture and Decorative Arts

Audio

다음에서만 사용 가능: English
Cover Image for 2325. Meissen Lion

2325. Meissen Lion

Inspiring Walt Disney

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PAIGE O'HARA:
This porcelain lion was made for Augustus the Strong, Elector of Saxony and King of Poland. Augustus was obsessed with porcelain and founded the Meissen manufactory. He ordered a menagerie of 600 animals from them, including this lion designed by Johann Gottlieb Kirchner.

Take a close look at the lion’s eyes, which speak to a larger story. In the 18th century, philosophers debated whether animals had souls and, therefore, feelings. If so, some believed that this was expressed through their facial expressions, particularly the eyes. Kirchner tried to communicate this lion’s monarchical nature through his raised eyebrows. But the effect is more melancholy than regal, highlighting the challenges artists face when anthropomorphizing animals.

Eyes speak volumes for people, too. Nearby, is a portrait of Magdalena Gonzáles. Her father, Pedro, was brought to Paris from the Canary Islands and their family lived at various European courts. Several family members, including Pedro and Magdalena, were afflicted with a genetic condition causing excess hair. They participated in court life, but weren’t treated as human equals. Instead, they were seen as curiosities, often equated to animals. Magdalena’s story is one of alienation and oppression, and in this portrait, it’s her eyes that convey her humanity with great poignancy.

When drawing the Beast, Disney animator Glen Keane equally paid special attention to depicting the eyes, as he attempted to convey the character’s humanity.

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