De Herfst

Ignatius van Logteren, 1717

Ignatius van Logteren (1685 - 1732). Bacchus als kind: De Herfst. Marmer. Amsterdam, 1717.

  • Soort kunstwerkbeeldhouwwerk
  • ObjectnummerBK-1959-32-B
  • Afmetingengrondvlak: breedte 25 cm x diepte 22 cm, hoogte 73 cm x breedte 38 cm x diepte 23 cm x gewicht (eigenschap) 53 kg
  • Fysieke kenmerkenwit Carrrara marmer

Ignatius van Logteren

Winged Putto Personifying Autumn (Bacchus)

Amsterdam, 1717

Inscriptions

  • signature, right side of the plinth, incised:I.V.Logteren A° 1717.

Technical notes

Sculpted in the round. The figure and the plinth have been carved from one piece of marble.


Condition

Fractures in the right forearm have been repaired, also one of the wings. The wooden base (‘termé’) mentioned in the Teegeler sales catalogue of 1785 is missing.


Provenance

? from the artist or his estate, acquired by the painter Isaac de Moucheron (1667-1744), Amsterdam, in or before 1733;1P.M. Fischer, ‘Flora en Bacchus en de beeldhouwers van Logteren’, Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum 30 (1982), pp. 3-6, esp. p. 5. his sale, Amsterdam (De Leth), 1 December 1744, no. 1;…; J.G. Teegeler, Amsterdam (De Bosch et al.), 13-14 July 1785, no. 7;…; private collection, England; from the dealer B. Stodel, London and Amsterdam, with pendant BK-1959-32-A, fl. 5,000 for the pair, to the museum, as a gift from Vereniging van Handelaren in Oude Kunst, 1959

Object number: BK-1959-32-B

Credit line: Gift of the Vereniging van Handelaren in Oude Kunst in Nederland


Entry

The winged figure of a boy stands in contrapposto on a square plinth. His pose mirrors that of his pendant Winged Putto Personifying Spring (Flora) (BK-1959-32-A). The boy is stretching his left hand out to a basket of fruits and flowers standing beside him on a tree stump. His head is turned to the right and is crowned with grapes and vine leaves; in his right hand he holds up a bunch of grapes. A cloth hangs over his right arm which is partially draped around his hips, hanging behind him down to the plinth.

Statues of putti – kinderkens (little children) as they were called – were exceedingly popular in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Their small size also made them eminently suited for smaller city gardens, where they were generally arranged in groups of four or five, having traditional allegorical themes like the Four Seasons, the Four Elements or the Five Senses. This small Bacchus and his pendant Flora may have been part of a series of four seasons, but if so they must have been separated from the set before 1744. In that year the two pieces were described in the catalogue of household effects of the painter-architect Isaac de Moucheron (1667-1744) with no mention of an accompanying Summer and/or Winter. Also, in the Teegelaar sale catalogue (1785) only Spring and Autumn were listed. So it would appear that the figures featured as a pendant pair of Flora and Bacchus from the start.

Although relatively little work by Ignatius van Logteren (1685-1732) remains, he was one of the most productive Amsterdam sculptors of the early eighteenth century.2For his oeuvre cf. P.M. Fischer, Ignatius en Jan van Logteren: Beeldhouwers en stuckunstenaars in het Amsterdam van de 18e eeuw, Alphen aan de Rijn 2005, chapter 4. After his death his flourishing workshop was carried on by his son, Jan (1709-1745), who had learnt the craft from his father. The Van Logterens’ activities developed in a period when demand for decorative sculpture to enhance the house and garden burgeoned. They did so with an impressive production of façade decorations, garden statuary and ornaments, lavish plasterwork, attractively modelled mantelpieces and all manner of decorative carving for townhouses and country residences for their clientele, who were primarily from Amsterdam. Playful putti form a recurring motif in this versatile oeuvre that the Van Logterens deployed with great panache.

The signature on Bacchus and the strong stylistic similarities between the work of father and son explain why, for many years, Flora was assumed to be a work by Ignatius as well. Moreover, the two pieces were described as such in the sale catalogue of the Teegeler collection.3‘7. A ditto (marble) Small Child, the head encircled with vines, and, next to it, a basket of fruits, by Ignatius van Logteren on its wooden Termé (base); 8. A ditto Small Child, the head encircled with flowers, and next to it, a basket of flowers, ditto’. J. Leeuwenberg, ‘Twee marmeren kinderfiguurtjes van Ignatius van Logteren’, Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum 7 (1959), pp. 32-34, esp. p. 32. However, the catalogue of Isaac de Moucheron’s effects dating from over forty years earlier, states specifically that Flora was not made by Ignatius, but by Jan.4‘N.1. A Small Child representing a Young Bacchus in white Marble, height 2 feet 7 inches with the Plinth, by Ignatius van Logteren. N.2. A ditto representing Flora by Jan van Logteren of the same height.’ That information can be assumed to be correct, as De Moucheron and the Van Logterens were friends and the sale of De Moucheron’s effects took place during Jan’s life. Slight differences support this assumption. For instance, the plinth on which Bacchus stands shows chisel marks and is higher than Flora’s smoothly polished plinth. Moreover, Flora, with her dancing pose, half-spread wings and fluttering loincloth, is less static than the little Bacchus. Fischer suggested that Isaac de Moucheron had perhaps purchased the Bacchus from Ignatius himself, or else from his estate, after which he commissioned Jan to produce a Flora to form a pendant.5P.M. Fischer, ‘Flora en Bacchus en de beeldhouwers Van Logteren’, Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum 30 (1982), pp. 3-6, esp. p. 5.

The surface of the marble is in remarkably good condition. So the figure has not spent much time – if any – unprotected in the open air, but stood in a hall, garden room or loggia, for example. That can also be deduced from the fact that the concomitant base mentioned in the Teegeler catalogue, was not made of stone but of wood (‘on its wooden Termé’).

Titia de Haseth Möller, 2025


Literature

J. Leeuwenberg with the assistance of W. Halsema-Kubes, Beeldhouwkunst in het Rijksmuseum, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1973, no. 365b, with earlier literature; P.M. Fischer, ‘Flora en Bacchus en de beeldhouwers van Logteren’, Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum 30 (1982), pp. 3-6; Y. Bruijnen and P. Huys Janssen, De vier jaargetijden in de kunst van de Nederlanden 1500-1700, exh. cat. Den Bosch (Noordbrabants Museum)/Leuven (Stedelijk Museum Van der Kelen-Mertens) 2002-03, nos. 147 and 148; P.M. Fischer, Ignatius en Jan van Logteren: Beeldhouwers en stuckunstenaars in het Amsterdam van de 18e eeuw, Alphen aan de Rijn 2005, pp. 150-52; R. Baarsen et al., Netherlandish Art in the Rijksmuseum 1700-1800, coll. cat. Amsterdam 2006, no. 12


Citation

T. de Haseth Möller, 2025, 'Ignatius van Logteren, Winged Putto Personifying Autumn (Bacchus), Amsterdam, 1717', in F. Scholten and B. van der Mark (eds.), European Sculpture in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: https://data.rijksmuseum.nl/20035807

(accessed 10 December 2025 05:54:42).

Footnotes

  • 1P.M. Fischer, ‘Flora en Bacchus en de beeldhouwers van Logteren’, Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum 30 (1982), pp. 3-6, esp. p. 5.
  • 2For his oeuvre cf. P.M. Fischer, Ignatius en Jan van Logteren: Beeldhouwers en stuckunstenaars in het Amsterdam van de 18e eeuw, Alphen aan de Rijn 2005, chapter 4.
  • 3‘7. A ditto (marble) Small Child, the head encircled with vines, and, next to it, a basket of fruits, by Ignatius van Logteren on its wooden Termé (base); 8. A ditto Small Child, the head encircled with flowers, and next to it, a basket of flowers, ditto’. J. Leeuwenberg, ‘Twee marmeren kinderfiguurtjes van Ignatius van Logteren’, Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum 7 (1959), pp. 32-34, esp. p. 32.
  • 4‘N.1. A Small Child representing a Young Bacchus in white Marble, height 2 feet 7 inches with the Plinth, by Ignatius van Logteren. N.2. A ditto representing Flora by Jan van Logteren of the same height.’
  • 5P.M. Fischer, ‘Flora en Bacchus en de beeldhouwers Van Logteren’, Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum 30 (1982), pp. 3-6, esp. p. 5.