Michel Erhart
14th Tiberius Auction
Starting price € 4.000
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Constance c. 1440/45 – after 1522 Ulm, attributed to the workshop
Saint Sebastian
Around 1520
Carved lime wood
Polychromed and gilded
Height 54 cm
St. Sebastian is depicted naked, wearing a typical golden loincloth and tied to a tree trunk. His wounds on his torso and legs are exposed; the arrows with which he was pierced are not preserved here. Sebastian served as an officer for Emperor Diocletian and was martyred for his Christian faith: he was tied to a tree where he was shot by numerical archers. As he was presumed dead, he was left behind; however, the arrows had not been able to kill him. A benefactress named Irene nursed him back to health; Sebastian later appeared before the emperor again, who finally had him whipped to death and thrown into the Cloaca Maxima, Rome’s sewer. The manner of his martyrdom and the marks left behind place his martyrdom in the tradition of Christ.
The martyr’s youthful body is slightly bent, with his right hand held above his head and his left hand tied to the tree behind his back. Detailed curls frame his angular face with deep-set, almond-shaped eyes under straight eyebrow ridges, high cheekbones and a slightly smiling mouth. He looks to the side, almost enraptured. The almost emaciated body is accentuated by the tight-fitting loincloth. It is pulled between his legs and flutters upwards in angular folds, as if moved by a gust of wind.
The tightly curled hair, the facial physiognomy and the drapery allude to the late Gothic style of the Ulm School and in particular to the works of Michel Erhart. Probably trained in the Netherlands and on the Upper Rhine, he was first listed in the Ulm tax lists in 1469 and worked his way up to become the leading sculptor there until his death in 1522. The almost graceful-looking pose can be compared with the figure of the youth in the highly significant Vanitas group in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna (KHM, Kunstkammer, inv. no. 1). There is also a bust of a youth in the Victoria and Albert Museum, which is very similar to this figure in the elaboration of the hair and the facial physiognomy (VandA, London, inv. no. 6994-1860).
Literature:
Barbara Maier-Lörcher, Masterpieces of Ulm Art, Ostfildern 2004.
Brigitte Reinhardt (ed.), Michel Erhart and Jörg Syrlin the Elder: Late Gothic in Ulm, Ulm 2002.
Barbara Schäuffelen and Joachim Feist, Ulm: Portrait of a Cityscape, Stuttgart 1987.
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