BREGHTEL, Hans Conraedt - b. ~1608 Nürnberg, d. 1675 Den Haag - WGA

BREGHTEL, Hans Conraedt

(b. ~1608 Nürnberg, d. 1675 Den Haag)

German goldsmith, active in The Netherlands. He was one of the leading goldsmiths working in The Hague in the mid 17th century. One of his masterpieces is a clock, inspired by classical architecture, now in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

Clock
Clock by

Clock

This elaborate clock was inspired by classical architecture. It provides an appropriate setting for the statuettes at cornice level which represent classical Roman deities and is surmounted by an allegorical statuette representing Old Father Time. The cupola is decorated with reliefs representing the signs of the zodiac; the plinth with scenes of the ages of man and of the seasons.

The clockmaker was Adriaen van den Bergh, also from The Hague.

Sconce
Sconce by

Sconce

The silver wall sconce with a single candleholder shown in the was presented to Czar Alexis Mikhaylovich by an ambassador from the States General of the Dutch Republic in 1648. It was made in The Hague by Hans Conraedt Breghtel, who was born in Nuremberg, Germany and became one of the most famous silversmiths working in The Hague at the time. The sconce is decorated with motifs in the auricular style that was popular in the seventeenth century and is exemplified by rippling forms that resemble the human ear. The style was initiated by goldsmiths of the van Vianen family of Utrecht and spread throughout Europe in the first decades of the seventeenth century. The round medallion in the centre of this wall light bears a Russian two-headed eagle under two crowns with an eight-pointed star between them.

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