Getting started with the collection:
Oval Medallion with the Head of Bacchus (?)
Ignatius van Logteren (possibly), c. 1715 - c. 1730
Jan van Logteren (1720 - 1730), circle of. Bacchus (?), c. 1720-1730. Marble.
- Artwork typesculpture
- Object numberBK-1959-58-A
- Dimensionsheight 48 cm x width 42 cm x depth 14 cm
- Physical characteristicswhite marble and red marble (frame)
Discover more
Identification
Title(s)
Oval Medallion with the Head of Bacchus (?)
Object type
Object number
BK-1959-58-A
Part of catalogue
Creation
Creation
sculptor: Ignatius van Logteren (possibly), Amsterdam (possibly)
Dating
c. 1715 - c. 1730
Search further with
Material and technique
Physical description
white marble and red marble (frame)
Dimensions
height 48 cm x width 42 cm x depth 14 cm
Acquisition and rights
Acquisition
purchase 1959
Copyright
Provenance
…; anonymous sale, Amsterdam (Frederik Muller), 26-29 May 1959, no. 747, fl. 644, to the museum
Documentation
Jaarverslag van het Rijksmuseum 1959, p. 18
Related objects
Related
Persistent URL
To refer to this object, please use the following persistent URL:
Questions?
Do you spot a mistake? Or do you have information about the object? Let us know!
Ignatius van Logteren (possibly)
Oval Medallion with the Head of Bacchus (?)
? Amsterdam, c. 1715 - c. 1730
Technical notes
Sculpted in high relief. Set in a profiled frame of red-veined marble.
Condition
The white marble has chipped off in places and has a porous surface.
Provenance
…; anonymous sale, Amsterdam (Frederik Muller), 26-29 May 1959, no. 747, fl. 644, to the museum
Object number: BK-1959-58-A
Entry
The vines in the hair of these men identify them as followers of Bacchus. A budding branch on the right side of the beardless young man (shown here) probably refers to his youth. He could perhaps represent the young god of wine himself. If so, the other man (BK-1959-58-B) might be Bacchus’ tutor and loyal companion, Silenus. In all likelihood, the pair of medallions would have been part of the ornamentation of a country house or garden pavilion. In the somewhat strictly geometrical gardens of the day, woodland creatures like Bacchus, satyrs and nymphs with their capricious traits, were eminently suited as representatives of unspoilt nature.1De Koomen in R. Baarsen et al., Rococo in Nederland, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksmuseum) 2001-02, p. 61.
Nothing is known of the medallions’ provenance. When the museum purchased them in 1959 at an Amsterdam sale, Leeuwenberg thought they might have come about in the Northern Netherlands, around 1680.2Verslagen der Rijksverzamelingen van geschiedenis en kunst 1959, p. 18. He found a clue in the first-floor landing of Sonoy almshouses in Alkmaar, where there were two white marble high reliefs of classical heads in similar coloured marble frames which he believed were of a later date.3Images in Object File RMA. Later Leeuwenberg adjusted his dating to around 1720-30, and associated the medallions with the circle of the Amsterdam sculptor Jan van Logteren (1709-1745).4J. Leeuwenberg with the assistance of W. Halsema-Kubes, Beeldhouwkunst in het Rijksmuseum, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1973, no 372. However, as Fischer already indicated, the robust facial type with thick lips, is closer to that sometimes applied by Jan’s father, Ignatius van Logteren (1685-1732),5P.M. Fischer, Ignatius en Jan van Logteren: Beeldhouwers en stuckunstenaars in het Amsterdam van de 18e eeuw, Alphen aan de Rijn 2005, p. 298. but then again the figures in question differ from his usual characters, in that they have a more Mediterranean look. The greatest similarities are found between the head type of the bearded faun (BK-1959-58-B) and that of the river god in Ignatius’ fountain group in the garden at Frankendael House (1714), that of a free-standing Neptune (1720) and of Hercules and the Hydra (c. 1720), also by Ignatius.6P.M. Fischer, Ignatius en Jan van Logteren: Beeldhouwers en stuckunstenaars in het Amsterdam van de 18e eeuw, Alphen aan de Rijn 2005, figs. 113, 148 and 149, resp.
The fact that both father and son Van Logteren dealt with the subject is corroborated by two busts of Bacchus, one of which (whereabouts unknown) is attributed to Ignatius and dates from around 1720, the other (Museu Calouste Gulbenkian, Lisbon), dated around 1739, to son Jan,7P.M. Fischer, Ignatius en Jan van Logteren: Beeldhouwers en stuckunstenaars in het Amsterdam van de 18e eeuw, Alphen aan de Rijn 2005, fig. 324 and R. Baarsen et al., Rococo in Nederland, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksmuseum) 2001-02, no. 4. who also carved the busts of a satyr and a faun recently acquired by the Rijksmuseum (BK-2024-8-1 and (-9-1). Although these busts are capricious and ‘faun-like’ too, they in fact have distinctive, somewhat screwed-up eyes and grimacing, slightly open mouths – contrary to the present reliefs. Yet Ignatius van Logteren clearly liked to vary the typology of this theme, as is evident from a terracotta bust of Bacchus bearing his monogram (c. 1715-20).8P.M. Fischer, Ignatius en Jan van Logteren: Beeldhouwers en stuckunstenaars in het Amsterdam van de 18e eeuw, Alphen aan de Rijn 2005, fig. 325. Here the god of wine in fact is portrayed as an aristocratic young man with the feminine traits, gentler facial expression and blissful gaze that characterized most of his oeuvre.
Bieke van der Mark, 2025
Literature
J. Leeuwenberg with the assistance of W. Halsema-Kubes, Beeldhouwkunst in het Rijksmuseum, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1973, no. 372, with earlier literature; P.M. Fischer, Ignatius en Jan van Logteren: Beeldhouwers en stuckunstenaars in het Amsterdam van de 18e eeuw, Alphen aan de Rijn 2005, pp. 298-99
Citation
B. van der Mark, 2025, 'possibly Ignatius van Logteren, Oval Medallion with the Head of Bacchus (?), Amsterdam, c. 1715 - c. 1730', in F. Scholten and B. van der Mark (eds.), European Sculpture in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: https://data.rijksmuseum.nl/20035810
(accessed 10 December 2025 05:56:44).Footnotes
- 1De Koomen in R. Baarsen et al., Rococo in Nederland, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksmuseum) 2001-02, p. 61.
- 2Verslagen der Rijksverzamelingen van geschiedenis en kunst 1959, p. 18.
- 3Images in Object File RMA.
- 4J. Leeuwenberg with the assistance of W. Halsema-Kubes, Beeldhouwkunst in het Rijksmuseum, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1973, no 372.
- 5P.M. Fischer, Ignatius en Jan van Logteren: Beeldhouwers en stuckunstenaars in het Amsterdam van de 18e eeuw, Alphen aan de Rijn 2005, p. 298.
- 6P.M. Fischer, Ignatius en Jan van Logteren: Beeldhouwers en stuckunstenaars in het Amsterdam van de 18e eeuw, Alphen aan de Rijn 2005, figs. 113, 148 and 149, resp.
- 7P.M. Fischer, Ignatius en Jan van Logteren: Beeldhouwers en stuckunstenaars in het Amsterdam van de 18e eeuw, Alphen aan de Rijn 2005, fig. 324 and R. Baarsen et al., Rococo in Nederland, exh. cat. Amsterdam (Rijksmuseum) 2001-02, no. 4.
- 8P.M. Fischer, Ignatius en Jan van Logteren: Beeldhouwers en stuckunstenaars in het Amsterdam van de 18e eeuw, Alphen aan de Rijn 2005, fig. 325.











