A GILTWOOD AND POLYCHROME-DECORATED CARVED RELIEF DEPICTING THE PRESENTATION IN THE TEMPLE
A GILTWOOD AND POLYCHROME-DECORATED CARVED RELIEF DEPICTING THE PRESENTATION IN THE TEMPLE

ATTRIBUTED TO HANS KLOCKER AND WORKSHOP, AUSTRIAN, CIRCA 1500-1525

Details
A GILTWOOD AND POLYCHROME-DECORATED CARVED RELIEF DEPICTING THE PRESENTATION IN THE TEMPLE
ATTRIBUTED TO HANS KLOCKER AND WORKSHOP, AUSTRIAN, CIRCA 1500-1525
The back with paper labels and multiple numbers inscribed in graphite and yellow chalk
36½ in. (93 cm.) high, 32½ in. (82.5 cm.) wide
Provenance
with Blumka Gallery, New York, 1997(?).
Exhibited
On loan to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art from 1999 until present.

Lot Essay

The sculptor Hans Klocker was active in the town of Brixen (Bressanone) at the end of the 15th century. The Tyrol, which is now divided between Austria and Italy, was a particularly fertile center for the production of carved and painted wooden altarpieces during the late Gothic and Renaissance periods. For a related altarpiece by Klocker see P. Williamson ed., European Sculpture at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, 1996, pp. 108-9 (entry by N. Jopek).

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