A Hypocrite and a Slanderer
A Hypocrite and a Slanderer
Published 2017-11-10T10:37:03+00:00
The expression on this man's face is difficult to interpret. Only by looking from below can the knitted brows, tight, thin lips, and carefully arranged grooves around the mouth be observed. This is one of nearly seventy headpieces, or Kopfstucke, that Messerschmidt made after his retirement from the Viennese court. Combining realism and caricature, he explored the shaped and expressions of heads and faces, linking them with different human characters and mental states. Messerschmidt himself suffered from mental illness and one observer said that the artist sculpted these heads hoping to ward off the spirits that invaded his mind. Another thought they were all "very much in his own likeness." This piece was titled "A Hypocrite and a Slanderer" after the sculptor's death. What Messerschmidt intended remains a matter of speculation.
Date published | 10/11/2017 |
Title | A Hypocrite and a Slanderer |
Date | ca 1770-83 |
Dimension | Overall (wt. confirmed): 14 9/16 x 9 5/8 x 11 5/8 in., 25lb. (37 x 24.4 x 29.5 cm, 11.3399kg) |
Accession | 2010.24 |
Period | Contemporary Art |
Medium | Tin Alloy |
Credit | Purchased, European Sculpture and Decorative Arts Fund, and Lila Acheson Wallace, Mr. and Mrs. Mark Fisch, and Mr. and Mrs Frank E. Richardson Gifts, 2010 |
Record | https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/236688 |
Artist | Franz Xaver Messerschmidt |
Place | Metropolitan Museum of Art |