- Kändler, Johann Joachim
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died May 18, 1775, MeissenGerman Baroque sculptor.In 1731 he was engaged to reorganize the modeling department of the porcelain factory at Meissen; he held the position of chief modeler there from 1733 until his death. It was largely through Kändler's genius that Meissen porcelain gained world renown. Among his best-known works are his commedia dell'arte figurines, largely done between 1736 and 1744.Harlequin, Meissen hard-paste porcelain figure from the commedia dell'arte modeled by Johann ...Courtesy of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London; photograph, EB Inc.
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▪ German sculptorborn 1706, Fischbach, Saxony [Germany]died May 18, 1775, MeissenIn 1731 Kändler—a sculptor at the court of the elector of Saxony, Frederick Augustus I (King Augustus II of Poland)—was engaged to reorganize the modeling department of the porcelain factory at Meissen (Meissen porcelain). He lent his great talents to the factory for a period of 44 years. His versatility and imagination were extraordinary, and it was largely through his genius that the Meissen factory gained world renown.Kändler was ably assisted in design and execution by three of the most distinguished pottery sculptors of the Rococo period, J.F. Eberlein, F.E. Meyer, and P. Reinicke. Scarcely a palace in Europe did not contain Meissen figurines, dinner sets, vases, or other works of the Kändler period. Among his best-known works are his commedia dell'arte figurines, largely done between 1738 and 1740; his birds for the Japanese Palace in Dresden, executed between 1731 and 1735; and the 2,200-piece Swan Service made for Heinrich, Count von Brühl, from 1737 to 1741. See also Meissen porcelain.* * *
Universalium. 2010.