After a model by Giambologna – Trotting horse – Italian, Florence – The Metropolitan Museum of Art https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/195196
the horse was subsequently acquired by English aristocrat William Lock of Norbury Park
the horse was subsequently acquired by English aristocrat William Lock of Norbury Park
Inscription: (on each corner and in center): A [image of a knot] E [reversed] (unidentified)(on red horn): W [backwards E] D H N O H N M E H O M (too fragmentary for interpretation)
The Cloisters: The Building and the Collection of Medieval Art in Fort Tryon Park
Features monumental art from New Guinea, Pacific islands, Australia, and Island Southeast Asia—regions united by shared Indigenous ancestry.
Planning and Department of Education and Culture, and Director of Bureau of Culture Park
The Met presents over 5,000 years of art from around the world for everyone to experience and enjoy.
. ———., and Christopher Rowell, “Italian Furniture at Attingham Park.”
Pater, born in Valenciennes, was apprenticed to a local painter in 1706. A contemporary would later report that his father sent him to Paris to study with Jean Antoine Watteau (1684–1721): probably the two painters left Valenciennes together in late 1709 or 1710
London. 25 Park Lane.
Sir Bernard Brocas, Wokefield Park, Sharnbrook, Berkshire, England (until 1834; sale
“I wanted to be that commanding huntress, to live among a fleet of adoring nymphs and hounds and transform any man who crossed me.”
National Park Service.
Brownlow Cecil, 9th Earl of Exeter, Burghley House, near Stamford, Northamptonshire (by 1847) ; William Alleyne Cecil, 3rd Marquis of Exeter 1825–1895, Burghley House, near Stamford Northamptonshire (until 1888) ; Marquis of Exeter sale, Christie, Manson & Woods, London (June 9, 1888, no
Erickson, New York (1936–d. 1961) ; her estate sale, Park-Bernet, New York (November
The Powel Room was originally located on the second story of a house that still stands today at 244 South Third Street in Philadelphia. The room is furnished with superb examples of Philadelphia Rococo-style furniture of the type that the Powels might have owned.
Right: Rococo dining room from Kirtlington Park, England, ca. 1748.
The Met presents over 5,000 years of art from around the world for everyone to experience and enjoy.
Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Cloisters collection, a separate museum in Fort Tryon Park