Prometheus
Estimate
20,000 - 30,000 GBP
Lot Details
Description
Attributed to Paul Heermann
Weigmannsdorf 1673 - 1732 Dresden
Prometheus
sandstone, with a stone support
184cm., 72½in.
Please note that this lot will not be on public view in our New Bond Street galleries for the auction exhibition, but we would be more than happy to arrange a viewing by appointment at our Greenford Park storage facility. To enquire, please contact eleanor.goldthorpe@sothebys.com.
Sotheby's London, 9 July 1992, lot 210;
Private collection, United Kingdom
This imposing sandstone figure of Prometheus is attributable on stylistic grounds to the Saxon court sculptor, Paul Heermann. In collaboration with his uncle, Johann George Heermann (circa 1645 – circa 1700), Paul Heermann created the sculptural decoration of the staircase at Troja Castle in Prague between circa 1685 and circa 1705. Representing a battle between the ancient gods and Titans, these monumental sandstone figures provide clear stylistic parallels for the broad anatomy, heavy musculature, contorted pose, and angular features of the Prometheus. Compare, in particular, the figures of Hercules and Vulcan at Troja (op. cit., p. 24, figs. 8 and 9). While a scientific analysis of the stone used for the present sculpture has ruled out an origin in Bohemia, it is likely that the Prometheus was sculpted for a similar project in or around Dresden, where Heermann spent the majority of his subsequent career.
RELATED LITERATURE
C. Kryza-Gersch (ed.), Der sächsische Barockbildhauer Paul Heermann, Dresden, 2022
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