Skip to main content

Harlequin with Bagpipes

Manufacturer (German, founded 1710)
Modeler (German, 1706 - 1775)
CultureGerman
OriginMeissen, Dresden, Germany
DateJuly 1736
MediumHard-paste porcelain with overglaze enamels, gilding
DimensionsOverall: 12.1 x 5.4 x 8.9 cm (4 3/4 x 2 1/8 x 3 1/2 in.)
MarkingsNone
DescriptionA Meissen figure of Harlequin playing the bagpipes modelled by J. J. Kandler. His head is turned, and he is wearing a blue fringed tricorn hat, iron-red jacket, and a turquoise sash and puce breeches.
Credit LineGift of George and Helen Gardiner
Object numberG83.1.900
Classifications
European Ceramics
Sub-classification
German Porcelain
Status
Not on view
Harlequin with Bagpipes and Columbine with Mandolin
Artist / Maker: Longton Hall Porcelain Factory
c.1754-1757
Object number: G83.1.897.1-2
Harlequin with Bagpipes
Artist / Maker: Meissen Porcelain Manufactory
c.1745-1750
Object number: G83.1.936
Harlequin with a "Pass Glass"
Artist / Maker: Johann Joachim Kändler
c.1736-40
Object number: G83.1.915
Harlequin with bagpipes
Artist / Maker: Johann Friedrich Eberlein
c.1740-1745
Object number: G83.1.918
Harlequin with bagpipes
Artist / Maker: Johann Joachim Kändler
July 1736
Object number: G83.1.909
Harlequin with Bagpipes
Artist / Maker: Meissen Porcelain Manufactory
c.1745-1752
Object number: G83.1.950
Harlequin with bagpipes
Artist / Maker: Meissen Porcelain Manufactory
c.1745-1750
Object number: G83.1.941
Harlequin with Bagpipes
Artist / Maker: Johann Joachim Kändler
c.1740-1745
Object number: G83.1.903
Harlequin with Bagpipes and Columbine with Hurdy-Gurdy
Artist / Maker: Johann Joachim Kändler
c.1740-1745; decorated and possibly made in the nineteenth or twentieth century
Object number: G83.1.943.1-2
Harlequin with Goat Bagpipes- Original
Artist / Maker: Johann Joachim Kändler
c.1736-40
Object number: G83.1.901
Harlequin with bagpipes
Artist / Maker: Johann Joachim Kändler
July 1736
Object number: G83.1.905
Harlequin and Columbine in ormolu mounted candalabra
Artist / Maker: Meissen Porcelain Manufactory
c.1740-1745
Object number: G83.1.940.1-4