Monday, October 21, 2024

Old Ivories

Anonymous German Artist
Beaker with Meleager and Atalanta
17th century
ivory
Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto

Simon Troger
Abduction of Proserpine
ca. 1750-60
ivory and wood
Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, Munich

Ignaz Elhafen
Abduction of the Sabine Women
1705
ivory relief
Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, Munich

Balthasar Griessmann
Hercules and the Nemean Lion
ca. 1670-75
ivory
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

Christoph Maucher
Hercules and Antaeus
ca. 1680-90
ivory
Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto

David Heschler
Hercules and Antaeus
before 1667
ivory relief
Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri

David Heschler
Hercules, Dejanira and Nessus
before 1667
ivory relief
Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri

Anonymous Japanese Artist
Wolf with Severed Head
ca. 1825-75
ivory netsuke
Asian Art Museum, San Francisco

Anonymous Japanese Artist
Severed Head resting on Dagger
19th century
ivory netsuke
Asian Art Museum, San Francisco

Anonymous German Artist
Allegory of Youth and Death
17th century
ivory
Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto

Anonymous Spanish Artist
Corpus
17th century
ivory
Harvard Art Museums

Justus Glesker
St Mary Magdalen
ca. 1650
ivory
Victoria & Albert Museum, London

Justus Glesker
St Mary Magdalen
ca. 1650
ivory
Victoria & Albert Museum, London

Balthasar Griessmann
Fall of Man
ca. 1670-80
ivory
Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto

Balthasar Griessmann
Sacrifice of Isaac
1679
ivory relief
Victoria & Albert Museum, London

David Heschler
Death stealing a Child
before 1667
ivory
Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto

from 1929

It is time for the destruction of error.
The chairs are being brought in from the garden,
The summer talk stopped on that savage coast
Before the storms, after the guests and birds:
In sanatoriums they laugh less and less,
Less certain of cure; and the loud madman
Sinks now into a more terrible calm.

The falling leaves know it, the children,
At play on the fuming alkali-tip
Or by the flooded football ground, know it –
This is the dragon's day, the devourer's:
Orders are given to the enemy for a time
With underground proliferation of mould,
With constant whisper and with casual question,
To haunt the poisoned in his shunned house,
To destroy the efflorescence of the flesh,
The intricate play of the mind, enforce
Conformity with the orthodox bone.

You whom I gladly walk with, touch,
Or wait for as one certain of good,
We know it, know that love
Needs more than the admiring excitement of union,
More than the abrupt self-confident farewell,
The heel on the finishing blade of grass,
The self-confidence of the falling root,
Needs death, death of the grain, our death,
Death of the old gang; would leave them
In sullen valley where is made no friend,
The old gang to be forgotten in the spring,
The hard bitch and the riding-master,
Stiff underground, deep in clear lake
The lolling bridegroom, beautiful, there.

– W.H. Auden (1929)