Smirking, dim-witted, grimacing or disgusted-that is how the character studies cast in lead or cut into alabaster appear to viewers: sculptures that do not adhere to any classical ideal of beauty but confront the viewer with a typology of the ugly. The fascinating character heads by the baroque sculptor Franz Xaver Messerschmidt may be indebted to his contemporary Johann Kaspar Lavater, yet they never cease to amaze with their untimely artistic aggressiveness, modernism even, exposing the flip sides of human expression.
Smirking, dim-witted, grimacing or disgusted-that is how the character studies cast in lead or cut into alabaster appear to viewers: sculptures that do not adhere to any classical ideal of beauty but confront the viewer with a typology of the ugly. The fascinating character heads by the baroque sculptor Franz Xaver Messerschmidt may be indebted to his contemporary Johann Kaspar Lavater, yet they never cease to amaze with their untimely artistic aggressiveness, modernism even, exposing the flip sides of human expression.
Messerschmidt, who created conventional portraits of dignitaries such as Empress Maria Theresa and Joseph II while working at the Imperial Academy in Vienna, began to turn exclusively to character heads in around 1770, a fact that quickly gained him the reputation of a maverick. Having taken early retirement due to a psychological disorder that was never clearly defined, he spent the rest of his life as a recluse in Pressburg. This extensive monograph about an exceptional artist attempts an interpretation of the "deeper meaning" in an oeuvre which is as unusual as it is uncompromising.
Foreword
Introduction
Essays
Michael Krapf
Franz Xaver Messerschmidt"s Life and Work
The career of a difficult one
Michael Krapf
The "Character Heads"
From the "simple heads conformable with nature" to the convulsive works
Michael Krapf
Patrons and Friends
with special regard to the role of the "magnetizer" F. A. Mesmer
Almut Krapf- Weiler
Messerschmidt and Contemporary Art
The reception of his oeuvre during the second half of the 20th century
Catalog
compiled by Michael Krapf
Appendix
Chronological table regarding Franz Xaver Messerschmidt"s biography
Bibliography
Credits
Lenders
Photo credits