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US_29: Heraldic Panel Brothers Caspar and Hans Loser
(USA_LosAngeles_LACMA_US_29)

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Title

Heraldic Panel Brothers Caspar and Hans Loser

Type of Object
Artist / Producer
Wirth, Abraham · attributed
Dating
1647
Dimensions
33.3 x 23.8 cm (13 1/8 x 9 3/8 in.)

Iconography

Description

The two brothers stand in the center of the panel. Both carry muskets and have belts with powder charges attached. They also carry musket rests (also called musket forks); Hans, the brother on the right, also holds a glowing match with which he will light the musket. They stand on a blue, yellow, and purple tiled floor. The traditional columns at the side are minimized. Above the lintel is the story of the death of Scilurus and his warning to his sons about the importance of unity. The inscription plate in the lower border is flanked by arms… More

Iconclass Code
45C16(RIFLE) · firearms: rifle
46A122(LASER) · armorial bearing, heraldry (LASER)
98B(SCYLURUS)68 · death of Scylurus: the Scythian king, on his deathbed, enjoins his eighty sons to break a bundle of rods (or arrows) tied together; when they can't do this, he breaks the rods one by one, thus teaching them that united they will be strong, divided weak
Iconclass Keywords
arrow · breaking · bundle · coat of arms · deathbed · eighty · father · father and son · heraldry · rifle · rod · son · strength · unity
Heraldry

Arms of Loser, Caspar: azure, a fleur-de lis or.
Arms of Loser, Hans: or, in base an Imperial eagle sable armed and beaked or in chief the initials H L sable.

Inscription

Caspar Laser vnd/ Hans Laser gebrūd/ er zū Lüpfertschwÿll/ Anō 1647
(Caspar Loser and Hans Loser, brothers of Lüpfertschwil [now known as Lüpfertwil] the Year 1647)

Signature

none

Technique / State

State of Conservation and Restorations

There are no replacements. A number of mending leads appear in the torso of the brother to the left and in the breeches of the brother on the right.

Technique

The panel is constructed of predominantly uncolored glass with silver stain and blue, purple, and green enamel and vitreous paint. Pot metal red appears in the breeches of the brother to the left. Minor elements of the architectural frame show green, rose, and violet glass. A cool neutral backpaint is applied the brothers’ shoes and hats, the eagle in Hans’ shield and Caspar’s red breeches and stockings. The brothers’ faces, hands, and stocks of their rifles, as well as the flesh in the narrative panel, are treated with sanguine. A spotty combination of blue and violet enamel with touches of silver stain on the floor suggests a marble conglomerate.

History

Research

Above the two brothers is a scene from one of Aesop’s fables, reputedly set in Greece during the sixth century BCE. The Old Man and his Sons, also called The Bundle of Sticks, was retold in Roman times, with the identification of the man as Scilurus, a king of Scythia in the second-century BCE. The later text was associated with the Roman historian Plutarch, early second century CE. “Scilurus, who left eighty sons surviving him, when he was at the point of death handed a bundle of javelins to each son in turn and bade him break it… More

Dating
1647
Original Donor

Loser, Caspar · Loser, Hans

Previous Location
Place of Manufacture
Previous Owner

The panel’s history is unknown until its presence in the William Randolph Hearst collection. He gave it to the museum in 1943 and it was accessioned in 1945.

Inventory Number
45.21.50

Bibliography and Sources

Literature

Bergmann, U. (2004). Die Zuger Glasmalerei des 16. bis 18. Jahrhunderts (Corpus Vitrearum Reihe Neuzeit, vol. 4), Bern.

Boesch, P. (1935). Die Toggenburger Scheiben, 75. Neujahrsblatt, Historischen Verein des Kanton St. Gallen, St. Gallen.

Caviness, M. (1991). Timothy B. Husband, edit. assist., Marilyn Beaven, Stained Glass before 1700 in American Collections: Silver-Stained Roundels and Unipartite Panels and Addendum to Checklist III. Corpus Vitrearum Checklist IV, intro. Timothy B. Husband, ed… More

Image Information

Name of Image
USA_LosAngeles_LACMA_US_29
Credits
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles CA, www.lacma.org
Link to the original photo
Copyright
Public Domain

Inventory

Reference Number
US_29
Author and Date of Entry
Virginia C. Raguin 2024