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Well of Moses Claus Sluter E. Pouzadoux (cast maker)

Artist

Claus Sluter Haarlem ca. 1360 – 1406 Dijon

E. Pouzadoux (cast maker) Palais du Trocadero, Párizs

Date 1395—1404/1405 (original), 1908 (cast)
Object type plaster cast
Medium, technique plaster cast
Dimensions

375 × 232 × 260 cm

Inventory number Rg.127
Collection Sculptures
On view Star Fortress (Komárom), The Transition from Northern Gothic to Renaissance Art, Gallery XIX

Claus Sluter, an influential master of early Netherlandish sculpture, entered in 1385 the service of Philip the Bold, Duke of Burgundy. A particularly renowned work by Sluter, the Well of Moses, was made for the Carthusian monastery in Champmol, which had been founded by the duke and is today a hospital. The hexagonal well was placed in the monastery courtyard, which now functions as the hospital garden. The well is bordered by statues of the prophets, including the eponymous Moses. The prophets are holding scrolls foretelling the death of Jesus. Weeping angels under the ledge were linked with a Calvary group (depicting Christ on the Cross) at the crown of the well. However, this element was sadly destroyed in the eighteenth century (fragments can be viewed at the Musée Archéologique in Dijon). Sluter’s sculptural realism goes well beyond the graceful style of the International Gothic, thereby anticipating the approach of the fifteenth-century Renaissance artists.

This record is subject to revision due to ongoing research.

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