eprintid: 1706 rev_number: 5 eprint_status: archive userid: 2 dir: disk0/00/00/17/06 datestamp: 2011-09-29 14:11:33 lastmod: 2013-11-06 10:28:18 status_changed: 2011-09-29 14:11:33 type: article metadata_visibility: show creators_name: Krasny, Piotr title: Osiemnastowieczne figury przydrożne w Buczaczu. Uwagi o inspiracjach czeskich w twórczości Bernarda Meretyna title_en: Eighteenth-century roadside shrines at Buczacz. Some observations on the Bohemian origins of Bernard Meretyn’s creative work ispublished: pub subjects: ddc-730 divisions: i-9 cterms_swd: Meretyn, Bernard cterms_swd: Pinzel cterms_swd: Skulptur cterms_swd: Butschatsch abstract_translated_text: In the suburbs of Buczacz (in the former Ruthenian Voivodeship of the Polish Kingdom) there rise two magnificent roadside shrines dedicated to St John of Nepomuk (1750) and to the lmmaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary (1751). These monuments were raised by Bernard Meretyn and embellished with sculptures by Jan Jerzy Pinsel. Thus they are the joint work of an architect and a sculptor, tightly integrated in accordance with the Baroque rule of ‘un bel composto’ formulated by Gian Lorenzo Bemini. The Roman architects implemented this rule by drawing precise designs of the statues which were to adorn their structures. The sculptors’ task was Iimited to translating these concepts into three dimensions. Similar relations between architects and sculptors existed in 18th century Central Europe. The most prominent architects there (Johann Lucas von Hildebrandt and Kilian Ignaz Dientzenhofer) as a rule chose their permanent collaborators from among sculptors. Also Meretyn and Pinsel worked together at numerous "fabricae", their professional relations finding reflection in social contacts (the architect was the godfather of the sculptor’s first son). lt may therefore be supposed that Pinsel received from Meretyn designs for Buczacz sculptures, defining at least their general forms (arrangement of figures, gestures, draping of robes). The roadside shrines at Buczacz clearly recall 18th century Bohemian monuments, this appearing both in their architectural forms and in the forms of the crowning sculptures. The shrine of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary is very much like the monument of St John of Nepomuk in the market place at Počatki (Franz Baugut, 1717-1720), while the motif of small pedestals with figures of putti, woven into its structure, has been borrowed from the monument at the Church of St Ursula in Prague (Kilian Ignaz Dientzenhofer and Ignaz Franz Platzer, 1746-1747). The other Buczacz shrine imitates the Bohemian monuments developed into a specific triptych (the figure of the patron saint on a pedestal and two flanking smaller figures set on consoles), which took form in the monuments set up in the early 18th century on the Charles Bridge in Prague. It is also worth noting that the statue of St John of Nepomuk on the Buczacz monument clearly resembles the sculpture of that martyr saint which adorns the portal of St George’s Church on the Hradshin in Prague (Ferdinand Maximilian Brokoff 1721-1722). Thus the Buczacz shrines are evident examples of the impact of 18th century Bohemian art on Polish art, affording an important argument for the Central-European origin of Bernard Meretyn’s creative work. abstract_translated_lang: eng date: 1995 date_type: published ubhd_kollation: 65-75 + Abb. 1-11 id_scheme: DOI id_number: 10.11588/artdok.00001706 collection: c-4 ppn_swb: 1651041849 own_urn: urn:nbn:de:bsz:16-artdok-17061 language: pol bibsort: KRASNYPIOTOSIEMNASTO1995 full_text_status: public publication: Prace z Historii Sztuki volume: 21 themen: T13 title_lat: Osiemnastowieczne figury przydrozne w Buczaczu. Uwagi o inspiracjach czeskich w tworczosci Bernarda Meretyna laender: LOs oa_type: green citation: Krasny, Piotr (1995) Osiemnastowieczne figury przydrożne w Buczaczu. Uwagi o inspiracjach czeskich w twórczości Bernarda Meretyna. In: Prace z Historii Sztuki, 21 (1995), 65-75 + Abb. 1-11. document_url: https://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/artdok/1706/1/Krasny_Osiemnastowieczne_figury_1995.pdf