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Europe
attributed to Joachim Henne, c. 1670 - c. 1700
Europe and Africa. Ivory, Netherlands, c. 1660.
- Artwork typesculpture
- Object numberBK-NM-9784
- Dimensionsheight 10.2 cm x width 3.5 cm x depth 3.5 cm
- Physical characteristicsivory
Identification
Title(s)
Europe
Object type
Object number
BK-NM-9784
Description
Eropa staat op een vierkant plintje wat naar rechts gekeerd op het linker been met vooruitgeschoven rechter. De gebogen rechter arm houdt zij vooruit, met de linker arm drukt zij een hoorn van overvleod tegen zich aan, die naast haat op de bodem rust en waaruit vruchten puilen. In het haar heeft zij vooraan een band en voorts een kroontje, waarvan aan de achterkant een sjaal uitgaat, die naar beide zijden in het haar is opgenomen en vervolgens op de rug afhangt. Aan de onderaan geschubde 'lederen' keurs met afhangende panden, die de borsten onbedekt laat, hangt een tot knieën afhangende rok en een tweede rok, die tot aan de voeten reikt. Een mantel, onder de hals met een broche gesloten, hangt van de rug af, wordt door de linker hand tegen de hoorn vastgehouden en reikt tot aan het plintje. Om de hals een ketting van schakels. In de rechter hand ontbreekt een voorwerp.
Part of catalogue
Creation
Creation
ivory carver: attributed to Joachim Henne
Dating
c. 1670 - c. 1700
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Material and technique
Physical description
ivory
Dimensions
height 10.2 cm x width 3.5 cm x depth 3.5 cm
This work is about
Subject
Acquisition and rights
Acquisition
purchase 1894-04-17
Copyright
Provenance
…; collection L. Abels, Huis Bolenstijn, Maarssen; her sale, Amsterdam (Frederik Muller), 18 April 1894, no. 61, with [BK-NM-9785](https://data.rijksmuseum.nl/20035667), fl. 29 for both, acquired by the Ministry of Internal Affairs for the museum
Documentation
Persistent URL
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Joachim Henne (attributed to)
Female Figure Representing Europe
c. 1670 - c. 1700
Technical notes
The woman’s right foot is damaged and the object in her right hand is missing. The front right corner of the plinth has been replaced.
Condition
The woman’s right foot is damaged and the object in her right hand is missing. The front right corner of the plinth has been replaced.
Provenance
…; collection L. Abels, Huis Bolenstijn, Maarssen; her sale, Amsterdam (Frederik Muller), 18 April 1894, no. 61, with BK-NM-9785, fl. 29 for both, acquired by the Ministry of Internal Affairs for the museum
Object number: BK-NM-9784
Entry
Dressed in classical raiment, this female figure personifying the continent Europe holds a large cornucopia that flanks the left side of her body. The statuette was acquired in 1894, together with a second ivory statuette personifying Africa (BK-NM-9785). When accompanied by corresponding figures of Asia and America, these ivories would originally have formed an ensemble representing the Four Continents, a common theme in sculpture but seldom encountered in ivory. An ivory allegorical figure representing America is preserved in Vermont.1Burlington, Fleming Museum of Art, University of Vermont, inv. no. 1973.41. While stylistically comparable to the Rijksmuseum duo, its larger dimensions (h. 17 cm) excludes the possibility it belongs to the same series.
Presumably based on the style and design, Leeuwenberg localized the present pair in the Northern Netherlands and dated them to circa 1660. Evident stylistic parallels with baroque ivory carvings from the Low Countries are nevertheless lacking. Far more convincing are parallels with the work of the north-German ivorycarver Joachim Henne (active 1663-1707), a court artist in the traditional sense. Henne’s precise biographical dates are unknown, but his earliest documented activity occurs in the years 1663 to 1665 in Hamburg, followed by employment at the ducal court of Schleswig-Holstein at Gottorf. From 1671 to 1676, he worked in Copenhagen at the court of the Danish king Frederick III and his successor, Christian V. In the early 1690s, his name again (or still) appears in that same city, albeit in the capacity of miniaturist painter and stamp-cutter. The last court Henne is known to have attended, in the first decade of the eighteenth century, is that of King Frederick I of Prussia in Berlin.2J. Rasmussen (ed.), Barockplastik in Nord-Deutschland, coll. cat. Hamburg (Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe) 1977, p. 373; M. Trusted, Baroque & Later Ivories, coll. cat. London (Victoria and Albert Museum) 2013, p. 22. Art historians have ventured a possible sojourn in the Northern Netherlands during the early phase of Henne’s career on stylistic grounds, though this cannot be substantiated by documentary evidence.3J. Rasmussen (ed.), Barockplastik in Nord-Deutschland, coll. cat. Hamburg (Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe) 1977, p. 373; C. Theuerkauff, Elfenbein: Sammlung Reiner Winkler, coll. cat. Munich 1984, p. 62.
Striking similarities between the present ivories and Henne’s work can be observed in the faces, hair and ample physical form of the figures in a number of his ivory reliefs. Suitable examples for comparison include the angels in an Adoration of the Shepherds from 1675 that bears Henne’s monogram,4M. Trusted, Baroque & Later Ivories, coll. cat. London (Victoria and Albert Museum) 2013, no. 18. and various female nudes, such as those he produced in Denmark, today found in the collection of Rosenborg Castle (Copenhagen) and elsewhere.5J. Rasmussen (ed.), Barockplastik in Nord-Deutschland, coll. cat. Hamburg (Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe) 1977, nos. 120, 122-26; C. Theuerkauff, Elfenbein: Sammlung Reiner Winkler, coll. cat. Munich 1984, no. 26 (The Three Fates). Cf. also a pair of wooden statuettes depicting a Lady and Cavalier, displaying comparable poses and similar female facial features, see ibid., nos. 81, 82 (as ‘Northern Germany, c. 1645-50’).
Bieke van der Mark, 2025
Literature
J. Leeuwenberg with the assistance of W. Halsema-Kubes, Beeldhouwkunst in het Rijksmuseum, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1973, no. 260a, with earlier literature
Citation
B. van der Mark, 2025, 'attributed to Joachim Henne, Female Figure Representing Europe, c. 1670 - c. 1700', in F. Scholten and B. van der Mark (eds.), European Sculpture in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: https://data.rijksmuseum.nl/20035666
(accessed 8 December 2025 18:54:23).Footnotes
- 1Burlington, Fleming Museum of Art, University of Vermont, inv. no. 1973.41.
- 2J. Rasmussen (ed.), Barockplastik in Nord-Deutschland, coll. cat. Hamburg (Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe) 1977, p. 373; M. Trusted, Baroque & Later Ivories, coll. cat. London (Victoria and Albert Museum) 2013, p. 22.
- 3J. Rasmussen (ed.), Barockplastik in Nord-Deutschland, coll. cat. Hamburg (Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe) 1977, p. 373; C. Theuerkauff, Elfenbein: Sammlung Reiner Winkler, coll. cat. Munich 1984, p. 62.
- 4M. Trusted, Baroque & Later Ivories, coll. cat. London (Victoria and Albert Museum) 2013, no. 18.
- 5J. Rasmussen (ed.), Barockplastik in Nord-Deutschland, coll. cat. Hamburg (Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe) 1977, nos. 120, 122-26; C. Theuerkauff, Elfenbein: Sammlung Reiner Winkler, coll. cat. Munich 1984, no. 26 (The Three Fates). Cf. also a pair of wooden statuettes depicting a Lady and Cavalier, displaying comparable poses and similar female facial features, see ibid., nos. 81, 82 (as ‘Northern Germany, c. 1645-50’).