ADDITIONS Acquisitions 1990 – 2008

TRAILING SISI Carriages, Clothes, Curios of the Empress Elisabeth of Austria

Ephesos ARCHITECTURE, MONUMENTS & SCULPTURE

SUUM CUIQUE. Magnificent Medals from Brandenburg-Prussia

THIS OBSCURE OBJECT OF ART

OPENING OF THE SOUTH- AND SOUTH-EAST ASIA AND HIMALAYA COLLECTION

ARTFUL RESISTANCE

STRAPS & BANDS

THE MYTH OF ANTIQUITY


Exhibition Calendar

Exhibition Review


 
SUUM CUIQUE.
Magnificent Medals from Brandenburg-Prussia

An exhibition organized by the Numismatic Collection of the Staatliche Museen in Berlin
October 7, 2008 till January 11, 2009
Kunsthistorisches Museum,
Coin Collection



 
From the rich holdings of the Numismatic Collection on Berlin’s famed Museum Island over 200 of the most beautiful and historically important medals commissioned by rulers from the House of Hohenzollern – Electors of Brandenburg and after 1701 Kings of Prussia – have been selected.
Of particular importance are late Renaissance objects d’art that feature gold medals in precious settings, one of the highlights of the exhibition. From the Baroque period come allegorical medals that celebrate historical events and glorify the Great Elector (1640-1688), and Frederick I, the first King of Prussia (1688-1713). Sebastian Dadler, Johann Ho hn and Christian Wermuth are the period’s celebrated masters of this art. A number of exquisitely modeled wax models by Raimund Falz, the most important medal-maker in Berlin during the Baroque period, have survived. They clearly document the outstanding skills required and the various technical challenges artists encountered when modeling and casting medals. The reigns of the neo-classicist King Frederick William III (1797-1840) and of King Frederick William IV (1840-1861), a celebrated connoisseur, marked high-points of this demanding yet delicate art. Important artists, among them Henri Franc ois Brandt (1789-1845) from Switzerland, and Leonhard Posch (1750-1831), a native of the Tyrol, collaborated with local artisans to achieve an unrivalled flowering of this subtle small-scale art in Germany’s northern-most kingdom.

The country’s final three kings – William I, Frederick III and William II – were also German Emperors; the abdication of the last of these rulers in 1918 marked the end of both the monarchy and of four centuries of art commissioned by and glorifying the ruling dynasty. Contrasting the rich Habsburg holdings in the permanent collection of the Coin Cabinet in Vienna with this sumptuous selection from Berlin offers new and exciting insights into medals celebrating two of Europe’s leading dynasties. In addition to the choice medals from Berlin, a number of magnificent and rare examples of medals strucked in Brandenburg-Prussia – but now in the Coin Collection in Vienna - will also be on show in the exhibition.

This is the Numismatic Collection’s first visit to the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna.
The curators of the exhibition are Bernd Kluge and Wolfgang Steguweit.


Downloads:

Press Release (PDF ca. 535 kB)
Credits (PDF ca. 530 kB)