Author Topic: World War - 1914-1919  (Read 3733 times)

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  • Richard Förster. 

    1919.  W E L T K R I E G —— 1 9 1 4  -  1 9 1 9 (World War 1914 - 1919).  Cast bronze, medium-brown patina, 66.6 mm, 95.9 g.  Vorzüglich (extra-fine).  Rare!

    Obverse: across a burning land, above a flaming town, a naked Kriegsfürie (war-fury) clad in only a windblown cloak, strides to left, clutching a writhing serpent in her right hand and a flaming torch in her left, her long hair knotted behind head; four stars center left sky; artist's initials R.  F. lower center edge. 

    Reverse: in center field the world globe with flames and smoke ascending from the European continent; crescent moon, stars, planet Saturn, a comet in the surrounding firmament; title inscription on riband scroll undulating across lower field.

    Cf: Die zeitgenössische Medaille und Plakette in Deutschland und Österreich der letzten 20 Jahre in Guss und Prägung, (1930), p. 14, pl. 3: no. 3 (obverse).
    Cf: Kluge, B., and B. Weisser.  2014.  Gold gab ich für Eisen, p. 110: A27.
    Cf: Klose, Dietrich O. A. 2016.  Europas Verderben 1914 1918: Deutsche und österreichische Medaillen auf den Ersten Weltkrieg, p 269: 22.10.
    Cf: Weisser, B.  2017.  "Medallic Art in Germany and the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the First World War" in Phagan, P., and P. van Alfen, The Art of Devastation: Medals and Posters of the Great War, pp. 86, 85: fig. 12 (same example as in Kluge and Weisser).

    War-furies carrying flaming swords and/or burning torches are often represented in Middle-European art, including medals, around the time of the First World War.
World War - 1914-1919
« on: November 18, 2019, 06:32:38 AM »

Richard Förster. 

1919.  W E L T K R I E G —— 1 9 1 4  -  1 9 1 9 (World War 1914 - 1919).  Cast bronze, medium-brown patina, 66.6 mm, 95.9 g.  Vorzüglich (extra-fine).  Rare!

Obverse: across a burning land, above a flaming town, a naked Kriegsfürie (war-fury) clad in only a windblown cloak, strides to left, clutching a writhing serpent in her right hand and a flaming torch in her left, her long hair knotted behind head; four stars center left sky; artist's initials R.  F. lower center edge. 

Reverse: in center field the world globe with flames and smoke ascending from the European continent; crescent moon, stars, planet Saturn, a comet in the surrounding firmament; title inscription on riband scroll undulating across lower field.

Cf: Die zeitgenössische Medaille und Plakette in Deutschland und Österreich der letzten 20 Jahre in Guss und Prägung, (1930), p. 14, pl. 3: no. 3 (obverse).
Cf: Kluge, B., and B. Weisser.  2014.  Gold gab ich für Eisen, p. 110: A27.
Cf: Klose, Dietrich O. A. 2016.  Europas Verderben 1914 1918: Deutsche und österreichische Medaillen auf den Ersten Weltkrieg, p 269: 22.10.
Cf: Weisser, B.  2017.  "Medallic Art in Germany and the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the First World War" in Phagan, P., and P. van Alfen, The Art of Devastation: Medals and Posters of the Great War, pp. 86, 85: fig. 12 (same example as in Kluge and Weisser).

War-furies carrying flaming swords and/or burning torches are often represented in Middle-European art, including medals, around the time of the First World War.
« Last Edit: November 24, 2019, 10:58:35 AM by Haarmann »