Bizarre Sculptures by Franz Xaver Messerschmidt From the 18th Century – Design You Trust — Design Daily Since 2007

Bizarre Sculptures by Franz Xaver Messerschmidt From the 18th Century

Franz Xaver Messerschmidt, an eighteenth-century German sculptor active in Austria, is best known for his series of dramatic “character heads.” The metal and stone busts are often disturbing in their extreme expressions. They have long prompted critics and scholars to speculate that the artist made them in reaction to an undiagnosed mental illness.

h/t: vintag.es

Franz Xaver Messerschmidt (1736–1783) was born in the village of Wiesensteig, in what is now southern Germany. He learned his trade from two uncles, a court sculptor in Munich, and an artist based in Graz, Austria. Later, Messerschmidt attended the Viennese Academy of Fine Arts and assisted at a foundry. His spectacular ability to work in stone and metal soon brought him portrait commissions from imperial and aristocratic clients. Made over the course of a decade, those early works reflect the prevailing late Baroque-Rococo sensibility, which emphasized the decorative.

Between 1760 and 1765, Messerschmidt traveled to Rome, Paris, and London. Seeing the work of other sculptors inspired him to shift toward Neoclassicism––a more spare and refined style. At this time, he began to emphasize his sitters’ features and character. In 1769, Messerschmidt taught at the Viennese Academy and established his own workshop. Those outward signs of success were short-lived, as colleagues and friends observed changes in his behavior. After failing to gain a professorship of sculpture position at the academy, Messerschmidt left Vienna and returned to Wiesensteig.

Messerschmidt likely began his “character heads” around 1770, as his mental health apparently deteriorated. He produced the life-sized busts rapidly, 69 within a 13-year period. He may have intended them as physiognomic studies, perhaps inspired by experiments enacted by his friend, the controversial physician Franz Anton Mesmer. Messerschmidt probably also knew of Johann Caspar Lavater, who popularized “physiognomy”––the notion that human character is discernible by a person’s physical appearance.

Collectively, Messerschmidt’s “character heads” display a range of emotions. Although they are not self-portraits, many resemble the artist. In any case, he never intended to exhibit or sell them. After a short stay with family members in Pressburg (present-day Bratislava, Slovakia), he died alone and in relative poverty.















If you want more awesome content, subscribe to 'Design You Trust Facebook page. You won't be disappointed.

More Inspiring Stories

Creep Out Your Neighborhood With Baby Doll Head Planters
Street Artists Turn Utrecht Apartment Building Into a Giant Bookcase Featuring Residents’ Favorite Books
The Stunning Beauty Of London Floors Or Why You Should Look Down While Travelling
A Badass "Heroic Girls In Movies" Scratch Off Poster
Cradling Hyper-Realistic Babies In Uncanny Valley
These Designers Create Stylish And Unusual Dresses From Kids’ Drawings
When Hijab Was Not In Force, Vintage Photographs Show How Iranian Women Dressed In The 1960s And 1970s
These Guys Make Neighborhood Laugh with Creative Fence Windows for Dogs
"Everyone is Awesome": Lego Launch First-Ever LGBTQ-Themed Set
This Brooklyn Eatery Offers A Pizza Topped With... Mini Pizza Slices
McDonald’s Turns Billboards Into Bee Hotels
The Most Controversial Ultrarealistic Art Sculptures By Patricia Piccinini
50 Awesome and Colorful Photoshoots of the 1970s Fashion and Style Trends
Reebok Reveals Tom & Jerry Collection
Italian Defense Shoes With Spurs for Protection, 1955
Blanc - World’s First HEPA Filter Powered Full-Face Modular Mask
This 16-Year-Old Vegan Teenager Turns His Food Into Stunning Art
This Illustrator Turns The Berlin Wall Into Art In A Way You've Never Seen Before
The Superb Glow-In-The-Dark Full Body Skeleton Costume By BANDIKA
This Girl is Doing Halloween Decorations Totally Right!
The Story Behind John Lennon's Psychedelic Rolls-Royce Phantom V
Get Shit Done With Mi Goals
Embroidery Meets Hyperrealism: Artist Cayce Zavaglia Creates Stunning & Realistic Embroidered Portraits
Mosaic Frescoes at Kievskaya Metro Station in Moscow Are Wearing Face Masks and Remind Us About Safety