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1 of 253523 objects
Tigress Suckling her Cubs before 1818
Enamel on porcelain | 33.0 x 42.0 cm (support, canvas/panel/stretcher external) | RCIN 404326
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A Vienna porcelain plaque decorated with a polychrome scene featuring the outside of a rocky cavern, where a recumbent tigress turns from eating grapes to look at her three suckling cubs; in the distance on the left a wooded landscape. The oval porcelain dish has a gilded rim with an alternating tongue pattern. After a painting attributed to Rubens, in the collection of the Comte de Lamberg in Vienna, in the early nineteenth century Josef Nigg (1782-1863), the father of the painter Alois Nigg, studied under Johann Drechsler at the Academy in Vienna. From 1800 to 1843 he was employed as a flower painter at Vienna's porcelain factory, and from 1835 he also taught painting there. A large painting of flowers on a porcelain plaque thirty inches in height, was presented by Nigg on behalf of the Viennese factory, at the Great Exhibition of 1851.
Provenance
One of four paintings forming two pairs, given to George IV when Prince Regent, by Francis II, Emperor of Austria, in 1818 (see RCIN 404325, 404323, 404324)
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Creator(s)
(porcelain manufacturer)Acquirer(s)
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Medium and techniques
Enamel on porcelain
Measurements
33.0 x 42.0 cm (support, canvas/panel/stretcher external)
48.6 x 57.8 x 5.8 cm (frame, external)
Category
Alternative title(s)
Tigress and three whelps
Place of Production
Austria