Bust of Felix Mendelssohn (1809 - 1847)

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Bust of Felix Mendelssohn (1809 - 1847)

Creator

Ernst Friedrich August Rietschel

German Artist · 1804–1861

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Born into a lower middle-class family, Ernst Friedrich August Rietschel became one of the most important sculptors in Germany in the 1800s. He is primarily appreciated for the monumental sculptures that adorn the pediments of many of the most important nineteenth-century buildings in Germany. Rietschel studied at the Dresden Art Academy, where he would eventually also teach. In 1826 he moved to Be

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Date
1848
Medium
Marble
Culture
German
Department
Sculpture
Institution
Getty Museum

Felix Mendelssohn, one of Germany's most gifted composers, died tragically at the age of thirty-eight. A year later, Ernst Friedrich August Rietschel made this memorial bust for the Mendelssohn family. In imitation of ancient busts, Rietschel represented the sitter with bare shoulders, using an abrupt termination that cuts the shoulders in half and supporting the bust on a geometrical base similar to the capital of an Ionic column with a cartouche below. To leaven the formality of the bust's geometry, the artist carefully rendered the naturalistic portrait elements--Mendelssohn's full, sensuous lips, the soft, deep-set eyes, the furrowed forehead, and curly crop of hair--to show Mendelssohn as his family and friends knew him. The marble bust conveys not only the composer's visual likeness but also his character: the high forehead suggests the composer's intellect, while the distant, penetrating gaze in his eyes speaks of his artistic vision. This evocative quality derives from the idea of an artist as a divinely inspired genius, a very popular Romantic concept. Displayed in the family home, the bust commemorated Mendelssohn's contribution to the world of music and was a personal memento of the man for those who were intimate with him.

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