Fan - with the scene Telemaque in the Isle of Calypso

Textile and Costume Collection

Accession Nr.: 24529
Place of production: Netherlands (presumably); Paris (presumably)
Materials: ivory; parchment leaf
Techniques: gilded; painted
Dimensions:
height: 24,5 cm
width: 42,5 cm

On the leaf bordered by delicately drawn flowers can be seen a girl resting beneath a tree in a garden as she regards a thoughtful young man standing in front of her. Hovering above them, Amor has just let fly his arrow at the girl. Next to the pair is a maiden picking two flowers, and behind the young man there is a warrior resting. The scene depicts an episode in what was perhaps the most popular novel of the 18th century, and one which exerted great influence throughout Europe: Francois Fenelon's Les aventures de Telemaque (1699), in other words stories of Telemachus's wanderings. The model for the composition was a copper engraving issued in 1724 by the Parisian engraver Edme Jeaurat (1688—1738), after a painting by Nicolas Vleughels (1668—1737).

Of the figures represented in the painting and in the engraving only the principal ones feature on the fan: Calypso, who tried to induce Telemachus to stay Mentor, who is asleep and two nymphs, with one of whom - owing to a mistake by Amor - Telemachus falls in love, instead of with Calypso. On the verso, in a finely drawn and colourful Oriental flower-garden contoured and patterned in gold, can be seen a young main taking leave of his sweetheart. On the sticks, decorated with a pattern of intertwining tendrils, are three irregularly shaped insets each with a little picture showing a seaside harbour. The guard-sticks are embellished with snails, scallops, fruit, and oars carved in relief and painted.

There is an analogous example in the Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore. There is a version of the scene with more figures in an English private collection and a version with four figures used to be kept by Berlin's Kunstgewerbe Museum. With the tendril ornamentation on the sticks this piece exhibits a close kinship with a fan dated c. 1680 and considered to be of French origin, and with a fragment of another at the Museum Carolino Augusteum, Salzburg. In all probability this fragment, published as a small French fan and dated to the last quarter of the 18,h century, was only a stick of a fan once supplied with a leaf. The earlier conjecture that the leaf might depict Rinaldo and Armida lost its validity when the model-picture was discovered. Of the same shape and size—and hence conceivable as a piece by the same workshop—is the fan in our collection bearing the inventory number Inv. no. 69.1420.1.

Literature

  • Maros Donka Szilvia: Bájos semmiségek. Az Iparművészeti Múzeum legyezőgyűjteménye (1700-1920). Balassi Kiadó - Iparművészeti Múzeum, Budapest, 2002. - Nr. 5. (téves ltsz.mal)
  • Szerk.: Szilágyi András, Péter Márta: Barokk és rokokó. Az európai iparművészet stíluskorszakai. Iparművészeti Múzeum, Budapest, 1990. - Nr. 6.203. (Maros Donka Szilvia)
  • Randall Richard H.: Masterpieces of ivory from the Walters Art Gallery. Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore, 1985.
  • Szerk.: Voit Pál: Régiségek könyve. Gondolat Kiadó, Budapest, 1983. - p. 365., 1. kép
  • Szerk.: Zádor Anna, Szabolcsi Hedvig: Francia regény két XVIII. századi falképsorozaton. Fénelon Télémaque-jának hazai fogadtatásához. Művészet és felvilágosodás. Művészettörténeti tanulmányok. Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1978. - 393-415. (Galavics Géza)