A LARGE MEISSEN MODEL OF COUNT BRÜHL'S TAILOR
VARIOUS PROPERTIES
A LARGE MEISSEN MODEL OF COUNT BRÜHL'S TAILOR

LATE 19TH CENTURY, BLUE CROSSED SWORDS AND ^ MARKS, INCISED 107., AFTER A MODEL BY J.J. KÄNDLER

Details
A LARGE MEISSEN MODEL OF COUNT BRÜHL'S TAILOR
Late 19th century, blue crossed swords and ^ marks, incised 107., after a model by J.J. Kändler
Modelled seated astride a billy-goat, the bewigged and bespectacled gentleman wearing a yellow floral coat, boots and a tricorn hat, the tools of his trade all about him
17in. (43cm.) wide, overall

Lot Essay

Count Heinrich Brühl was minister and favorite to Augustus III. He was appointed administator of the Meissen factory from 1733 to 1763. By tradition Brühl was a man famed for his fashion sense. His tailor was thus an important part of his entourage. However, when the tailor's ambitions made him ask for an invitation to dine at court, the Count found the suggestion beyond the pale and well above the tailor's station. To put him in his place, the Count requested Kändler to make a figure of the tailor which he could place on his table and thus fulfil his empty promises. Kändler's undoubted satyric wit and sense of the ridiculous is here preserved. See Len and Yvonne Adams, Meissen Portrait Figures, London, 1987, p. 188 and 192; also see Robert Röntgen, The Book of Meissen, Atglen, PA, 1996, p. 44-45 and the back dust jacket cover, for two full page illustrations of this model. Also according to Berling ed., Meissen an Illustration History, p. 35, this group is described in the Meissen records of 1744 as the 'Brühl tailor', however no reference to a particular person or event is mentioned.

More from 19th Century Furniture, Sculpture, Works of Art and Ceramics

View All
View All