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Total de Resultados: 42

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alb9423824 Horse's head with open mouth, to the right Horse's head after Gerrit Malleyn (series title), print maker: Joannes Bemme, intermediary draughtsman: Gerrit Malleyn, c. 1800 - in or before 1841 and/or 1801, paper, etching, h 100 mm - w 140 mm.
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alb5032511 Vz: a bald and bearded Silenus mask ends in a horse's head and neck, in the mouth of the horse a branch, behind the Silenus mask a cornucopia and a ram's head, the whole is supported by cock's feet., Gem , intaglio, ringstone, carnelian, Color: red, Shape: oval, Machined: edge cut at the back compared to the front, Method: modeling with rounded drill, detailing with many short rounded wheel grooves., 12 x 9 mm, D 2.5 mm, 2nd century BC. - 7th century AD. -200 BC.
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alb3456628 Bit, ca. 1575–1625, possibly Italian, Iron, tin, gold, silver, copper alloy, 12 x 8 1/2 in. (30.5 x 21.6 cm), Equestrian Equipment-Bits, Many fully functional bits of the time were enhanced with lavish decoration, such as this example with elaborately embossed roundels and intricate floral patterns in gold and silver. This is a curb bit of iron comprised of a mouth-piece (cannon), two cheeks, each with a circular boss, and a hook and chain to pass underneath the horse's jaw.
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alb4982361 Vz: a bald and bearded Silenus mask ends in a horse's head and neck, in the mouth of the horse a large palm branch, behind the ears of the Silenus the body and tail of a rooster originates, the whole is supported by cockscomb, gem, intaglio, ringstone, carnelian, Color: red, Shape: oval, Machined: edge at front cut backwards compared to rear, Method: modeling with thick rounded drill, detailing with several rounded wheel grooves, 9 x 8 , 5 mm, D. 2 mm, 2nd century BC. - 7th century AD. -200 BC.
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alb4991540 Vz: a bald and bearded Silenus mask ends in a horse's head and neck depicted with moons and a bit, in the mouth of the horse an ear of corn, from the back of the mask comes a cornucopia and a ram's head with two ears of corn in his mouth, behind the ram's head the tail of a rooster, the legs of a cock carry this fantasy whole, in the field a twig., gem, intaglio, ringstone, jasper, Color: red, Shape: oval, Processing: edge cut at the rear with respect to the front, Method: modeling with large rounded drill, detailing with short rounded wheel grooves, 14 x 11 mm, D. 2.5 mm, 2nd century BC. - 7th century AD. -200 BC.
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alb3636911 Horse and Rider Startled by a Snake. Culture: Northern Italian, possibly Padua. Dimensions: .1419a (confirmed): 9 × 4 × 8 1/2 in. (22.9 × 10.2 × 21.6 cm).1419b (confirmed): 6 1/16 × 4 × 4 in. (15.4 × 10.2 × 10.2 cm). Date: early 16th century.This is one of the finest small bronze horse-and-rider groups of the early Renaissance. A snake beneath the horse's raised hooves is poised to strike, and horse and rider react in unison to this common foe. Both open their mouth in alarm. The sharply defined wrinkles on the horse's neck and the taut facial muscles of the rider reveal their tension; even the angular bent of their limbs unites man and animal. The horse is neither saddled nor bridled (a protuberance in the mane suggests that the rider grasps the horse's hair, although it also functions as a strut attachment). The man wears short, classical armor with breastplate straps over the tunic and scale-patterned leggings. He rides bareback in the manner of ancient cavalry; his raised hand may have held a whip that lashed at the snake.Like Shouting Horseman, the famous bronze by Andrea Riccio in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, our group shows a nervous, startled mount and rider shouting. The similarity of subject and expression led scholars to attribute our bronze to Riccio.[1] But over time it has become clear that the Riccio bronze in London may well have influenced this one now in New York and that while both must have issued from northern Italy they were not modeled by the same hand. In fact, Riccio's energetic chasing of the bronze surface is quite distinct from the smooth contours and refined details of the Museum's example. Its precision of form led James Draper to wonder whether the Museum's bronze was modeled on a wood carving, perhaps by Francesco di Giacomo da Sant'Agata, who was active in Padua between 1491 and 1528. His first training was in goldsmithing, but he is known to have carved in boxwood.[2] Subsequently, Draper has withdrawn this attribution, though he continues to believe that the sculptor of this horse and rider worked in northern Italy, perhaps in Padua, and, like Sant'Agata, was strongly influenced by Riccio's example.[ 3] Undoubtedly, the work is intimately connected to an elite class of unique bronzes that includes the Frick Collection's Naked Female Figure (Diana?), a Rape of Europa in the Szépmüvészeti Múzeum, Budapest, and a Hecate or Prudence in the Bode Museum, Berlin.[4]No exact model has been identified for the composition. Draper has proposed that examples carved on ancient gems -- which are clearly the kind of source that appealed to the antiquarian scholars and artists active in and around the University of Padua -- inspired the bronze's subject and form.[5] The sharply incised details of the rider's face may owe their character to the great North Italian painter Andrea Mantegna; woodcuts after an equestrian in Andrea Mantegna's Triumph of Caesar canvases at Hampton Court, near London, may have exerted some influence on this figure.[6] Without a literary source for this composition, the subject remains elusive. It may well be an imagined scene set in ancient times, combining an allusion to antiquity with a contemporary penchant for dramatic storytelling.[Ian Wardropper. European Sculpture, 1400-1900, in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York, 2011, no. 11, pp. 42-43.]Footnotes:[1] Leo Planiscig. "Per il quarto centenario della morte di Tullio Lombardo e di Andrea Riccio." Dedalo 12 (1932), pp. 901-24, p. 917.[2] James David Draper. "Andrea Riccio and His Colleagues in the Untermeyer Collection." Apollo 107 (March 1978), pp. 170-80, pp. 178 - 79.[3] James David Draper. Review of the exhibitions "Rinascimento e passione per l'antico: Andrea Riccio e il suo tempo," at the Castello del Buonconsiglio and Museo Diocesano Tridentino, Trent, and "Andrea Riccio: Renaissance Master of Bronze," at the Frick Collection, New York, and the accompanying publications (see Riccio 2008). Sculpture Journal 19, no. 1 (2010), pp. 129-33, pp. 130 - 31. Volker Krahn in Von allen Seiten schön: Bronzen der Renaissance und des Barock. Wilhelm von Bode zum 150. Geburstag. Exh. cat. edited by Volker Krahn. Altes Museum, Berlin; 1995-96. Berlin, 1995, p. 204, calls this bronze "Paduan, around 1500."[4] For Naked Female Figure, see John Pope-Hennessy. The Frick Collection: An Illustrated Catalogue. Vol. 3, Sculpture: Italian. New York, 1970, pp. 98 - 105, and Art in the Frick Collection: Paintings, Sculpture, Decorative Arts. New York, 1996, p. 148; for Rape of Europa, see Krahn in Von allen Seiten schön 1995, pp. 208 - 9, no. 33, and Bronzetti veneziani: Die Venezianischen Kleinbronzen der Renaissance aus dem Bode-Museum Berlin. Exh. cat. by Volker Krahn. Georg-Kolbe-Museum, Berlin; Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna; Ca' d'Oro, Venice; 2003. Berlin and Cologne, 2003, ill. p. 128; for Hecate or Prudence, see Krahn in Von allen Seiten schön 1995, pp. 206 - 7, no. 32, and Krahn in Bronzetti veneziani 2003, pp. 128 - 31, no. 31.[5] Draper 1978, pp. 178 - 79. See also Olga Raggio in Profil du Metropolitan Museum of Art de New York: De Ramsès à Picasso. Exh. cat. Galerie des Beaux-Arts, Bordeaux; 1981. Bordeaux, 1981, pp. 108 - 9.[6] Raggio in Profil du Metropolitan Museum 1981, pp. 108 - 9. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3681762 Curb Bit. Culture: Thracian or Celtic. Dimensions: H. 6 1/4 in. (15.9 cm); W. 4 1/4 in. (10.8 cm); Wt. 11.4 oz. (323.2 g). Date: 2nd-1st century B.C..The mouthpiece of this bit consists in two spindle-shaped links articulated in the middle. They are connected on either side to lyre-shaped attachments for the bridle's cheekpieces (partly broken). The two shanks, from which hooks hang for the reins, are connected by a horizontal bar acting as a curb. The curb bar would have pressed the horse's chin when reins were pulled back. The large lyre-shaped elements helped indicate the direction to the horse and held the bit in place in the mouth. The shape of these cheekpieces, as well as the rein hooks, are inspired from Hellenistic Greek and Macedonian bits, from which they evolved. This object is also an example of the earliest type of curb bit to have been invented. It seems to have developed in the Balkans among Thracian and Scordisci (Eastern Celts) cultures between the 3rd and 1st century B.C.. These populations were known for their great equestrian skills, especially at war. Examples of these bits have also been occasionally found in some western Celtic burials dated of the 1st century B.C., but they mostly spread in Roman territories during the conquest, thanks to the Thracian and East Celtic cavalrymen incorporated in the army. Curb bits were actually an improvement in military technology, since they allowed riders to have very good control of their horses with only one hand, freeing the other for holding a weapon. Even if this bit is said to have been found in Florence, it has probably been made in the Balkans, and then brought to the Italian peninsula by a rider of Eastern origin. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb5028813 Vz: a bald and bearded Silenus mask ends in a horse's head and neck, on the head moons and reins, from the back of the mask comes a ram's head with two ears of corn in its mouth, the whole is supported by cock's feet ., gem, intaglio, ringstone, jasper, Color: red, Shape: oval, Machining :, Style: modeling with thick rounded drill, detailing with short rounded wheel grooves., 8 x 7.5 mm, D. 2 mm, 2nd century BC. - 7th century AD. -200 BC.
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alb5008480 Vz: a bald Silenus mask ends in a horse's head, in the mouth a branch, the mask is placed on a rooster., Kz: bird (seagull?) With spread wings., Gem, intaglio, ringstone, jasper , Color: red, Shape: oval, Machined: edge cut at the front with respect to the rear, Method: modeling with rounded drill, detailing with a few thick rounded wheel grooves., 12.5 x 10 mm, D. 3, 5 mm, 2nd century BC. - 7th century AD. -200 BC.
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alb4992532 Vz: a bald and bearded Silenus mask ends in a horse's head and neck, behind the mask a caduceus, a ram's head with two ears of corn in the mouth and a cock's tail, the whole is supported by cock's feet., Gem, intaglio, ringstone, jasper, Color: yellow, Shape: oval, Machined: edge cut at the front compared to the rear, Method: modeling with thick rounded drill, detailing with many short and thick rounded wheel grooves., 16 x 12 mm, D 2 mm, 2nd century BC. - 7th century AD. -200 BC.
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alb3675121 Curb Bit. Culture: German. Dimensions: H. 15 1/2 in. (39.4 cm); W. 7 1/2 in. (19.1 cm); Wt. 2 lb. 2.7 oz. (983.7 g). Date: 17th century.According to contemporary equestrian manuals, this was a gentle-medium bit, good for horses with a good mouth but a thick tongue and sensitive bars (part of the horses' jaw without teeth). The gooseneck canons of the mouthpiece were meant to give more freedom to the tongue. The banquets, the parts of the cheekpieces where the mouthpiece is attached, can be opened to switch out the mouthpiece, a feature particularly appreciated on dressage bits in Germany.If the very long shanks look impressive, and would logically add more leverage effect, and so more strength, they would actually have been blocked at some point by the horse's chest, reducing their impact. Curb bits were also at this time used with a very light hand, the well-trained horses responding by anticipation to the slightest move of the reins. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3659519 Snaffle Bit. Culture: European, Bohemia. Dimensions: W. 6 1/4 in. (15.9 cm); Wt. 1.7 oz. (48.2 g). Date: 1st - 4th century.The snaffle bit is the simplest type of horse bit, and has an effect on the bars (part of the horses' jaw without teeth) and the corners of the lips. Here the twisted canons and the central piece add some severity, since by bending over the tongue, they would bring the twisted links in contact with the bars. This bit was originally probably completed by larger metal rings or cheekpieces made of perishable material, like wood or bone. The cheekpieces help indicate the direction to the horse and keep the rings from pulling through the horse's mouth. The headstall would have probably being connected to these missing rings or cheekpieces as well.This kind of bit is found in burials associated with several populations living and travelling between eastern and central Europe during this period. This example was found in what is today Podebrady, in Czech Republic. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3679108 Curb Bit. Culture: German. Dimensions: H. 7 in. (17.8 cm); W. 6 1/4 in. (15.9 cm); Wt. 1 lb. 4.9 oz. (592.5 g). Date: 18th century.This driving bit was used for horses pulling carriages and sleighs. The large rings prevent the bit from pulling through the horse's mouth. The triangular loops on the purchases attached the bearing reins, connected to the horse's collar. They were used to prevent the animal from lowering its head, and, for aesthetic reasons, to adjust all the horses' heads to the same level.Driving bits are usually more rigid compared to riding ones, as the voice and the hand are the only ways of communicating with the animal. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb4876008 Giovanni Andrea Maglioli, Sea Monster with a Water Fowl in its Mouth, 1580-1610, engraving on paper, 7 1/16 in. x 10 3/8 in. (17.9 cm. x 26.4 cm.), Maglioli's monsters impress rather than horrify the viewer. In scores of seagoing composite beasts, the artist combined upper bodies of humans, goats, bulls, lions, and even an elephant with the tails of dolphins. In this print, Maglioli's dog-headed hippocamp (fish-tailed horse) grasps a luckless duck in its jaws.Fins and foliage sprout from the monster's equine forequarters and serpentine tail.The decorative invention of this startling beast exemplifies the artistic freedom of fantasy and imagination discussed by the ancient Roman poet Horace in his Ars Poetica (ca. 18 B.C.): 'Imagine a painter who wanted to combine a horse's neck with a human head, and then clothe a miscellaneous collection of limbs with various kinds of feathers, so that what started out at the top as a beautiful woman ended in a hideously ugly fish... Painters and poets have always enjoyed equal right to venture on what they will.'.
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alb3678652 Pendant Icon: St. George, Virgin and Child Enthroned. Culture: Ethiopian. Dimensions: H. 4 3/4 x W. 3 1/8in. (12.1 x 7.9cm). Date: 18th century.This pendant's intimate scale and protective external panel allowed it to be used as a portable personal icon. The single-faced diptych's carved wooden case could be opened to reveal paintings of the Virgin Mary and St. George, two of the most popular figures in Ethiopian Orthodoxy Christianity. The hollow inverted v-shaped cylinder at the top enabled it to be suspended from the owner's neck. An interlaced square cross is carved below the loop on each side. Two small c-shaped hooks are mounted on hinges on the right side of the front of the case. They likely fit into a now-missing latch, which would have been attached to two holes pierced through the reverse of the case. Both the front and back of the case are ornamented with shallow carved designs alternating with plain bands. The front of the case has four plain bands, and three patterned with interlace, hatching, and zigzags. A flared pattée cross is at its center. On the reverse of the case are three plain bands interspersed with two bands carved with interlace and hatching. They frame an inner cross composed of a diagonal three-band interlace enclosing a circle. The wood on the front and sides of the case have a slight sheen, and is darker than that of the back. On the principle side, the main panel features Mary and the Christ Child flanked by two archangels. She carries the Christ child on her right side, and holds a mappula (handkerchief) in her left hand. Her sweeping blue robe, edged with yellow and green, covers her hair. A small yellow halo surrounds each figure's head. This form of the Virgin and Child was modeled after the Virgin of Santa Maria Maggiore, first introduced into Ethiopia in print form by the Jesuits around 1600. Rather than slavishly copying the European model, the Ethiopian artists adapted it to their own aesthetic preferences, as evident by the short, cropped black hair of Christ and the archangels. Instead of standing against a blank backdrop, as the Virgin does in the European model, the Virgin sits on a throne draped with bright yellow cloth enlivened with a red grid pattern. The addition of the throne, as well as the winged archangels--who each hold a hand cross particular to Ethiopian priests-- is itself drawn from Ethiopian models of the Virgin dating to the fourteenth century or earlier. The child's striped robe, reminiscent of locally-produced woven textiles, and bare feet also represent a departure from the print. Believed to be an intercessor between humans and God, the Virgin Mary is one of the Ethiopian Orthodox church's most venerated figures. Mary's personal presence is felt through her divine images, thus making this a diminutive, yet powerful object.St. George slaying the dragon is represented on the adjacent panel. Like many Ethiopian saints, he is depicted on horseback; the distinctive white coat of his horse helps to identify him. The horse's trappings are simple strips of red and green, ornamented only with yellow rings on the harness. Like the male figures in the adjoining panel, St. George has a halo and close-cropped black hair. His robe of green, blue, and red flies out behind his right arm, which he raises to point a long spear at a scale-covered dragon. The painting has captured the moment when the tip of the spear enters the dragon's open mouth. Recoiling beneath the feet of the white steed, the dragon has a curling tail and a single eye, a hallmark in Ethiopian Orthodox painting of evil figures. Images of St. George the Dragon-Killer represent the triumph of good over evil, in which the warrior saint is a knight of Christ. To the saint's right is Birutawit the Maiden, dressed in a long red robe. She is perched in a tree whose leaves are represented by irregular circles of green sprouting from slender brown branches. Iconography of the rescued maiden arose in Ethiopian icons of St. George in the fifteenth century. His pose, dress, and equipment evoke imagery of noble Ethiopian warriors, placing the story of the powerful saint in Ethiopia itself. Given the damage to the paint, it is difficult to determine the original state of the background, though it appears to have been a solid yellow field.Images of St. Mary and St. George were frequently juxtaposed in diptychs and other icon paintings because they were linked in the Senkessar, a religious text with the death dates of the saints and short commentaries on their lives. In the Senkessar, the Feast of the Assumption of both the Virgin and St. George take place on the same day (16 Nähase). As is typical in these pairings, St. George rides towards the Virgin in this diptych, emphasizing his role as Christian protector.Pendant icons became popular in the seventeenth century, and remained common until the nineteenth. The dating of this work is contested: it has been suggested that given the execution of the painting and its bright pigments, it is highly likely that a carved case of an earlier date and higher quality was repainted sometime in the twentieth century, using the historic Gondärine style. The Gondärine style evolved in the courtly scriptoria in the mid-seventeenth century, and remains a popular model for present-day painters of religious art. It is generally characterized by the use of three-quarter pose, vivid pigments, the inclusion of both secular and religious objects, and the detailed rendering of textiles. While the "First Gondärine" style tended towards flatter depictions, the "Second Gondärine" incorporated more naturalistic shading. The left-most painting is webbed with cracks, revealing the thin layer of gesso applied to the wood before painting. The handling of the paint suggests an inexpert artist who was unable to achieve the opaque surfaces common in the finest Ethiopian paintings. It also lacks a solid definition of lines or the precise modeling of figures, shading, or textiles characteristic of the Second Gondärine style, of which is attempts to imitate. The bright palette--neon yellow, Kelly green, black, red, pink, electric green, and blue--suggests the use of commercial paints, rather than locally-made ones, which would have been made from mineral and organic pigments. Despite the shortcomings of its execution, the images of Mary and St. George testifies to the longevity of the influence of the Gondärine style on Ethiopian Orthodox art. Additionally, the work has a noteworthy provenance, as it was gifted by Princess Hirut Desta (Ruth), granddaughter of the Emperor Haile Selassie, to Lila Wallace, co-founder of the American magazine Reader's Digest.Kristen Windmuller-Luna, 2016Sylvan C. Coleman and Pam Coleman Memorial Fund Fellow in the Department of the Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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MBDHOMO_EC030 THE HORSE'S MOUTH, alec guinness, 1958
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MBDHOMO_EC029 THE HORSE'S MOUTH, Alec Guinness, 1958
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alb2162828 Original film title: THE HORSE'S MOUTH. Spanish title: UN GENIO ANDA SUELTO. English title: THE HORSE'S MOUTH. Portuguese title: MALUCO GENIAL. Year: 1958. Director: RONALD NEAME. Stars: ALEC GUINNESS.
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alb242461 Original film title: THE HORSE'S MOUTH. Spanish title: UN GENIO ANDA SUELTO. English title: THE HORSE'S MOUTH. Portuguese title: MALUCO GENIAL. Year: 1958. Director: RONALD NEAME. Stars: ALEC GUINNESS.
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alb3644407 Horse Bit. Culture: Visigothic or Byzantine. Dimensions: Overall: 10 5/8 x 7 1/16 x 5 5/16 in. (27 x 18 x 13.5 cm). Date: 7th-9th century.This elaborately decorated bit, resembling the spade bit used by some (Western-style) riders today, has a large projecting tongue, or port, that would have been inserted into the horse's mouth. The bridle was attached to the moveable rectangular plaques, while the reins were strung through the rings on the straight bar, beneath the horse's jaw. The severity of the bit implies both a well-schooled horse and a skilled rider; a misstep by either would inflict great pain on the beast. The rich inlaid decoration includes Greek monograms, human faces, animal heads, and vine scrolls. Perhaps copied from or inspired by Byzantine art, the Greek monogram likely indicated the importance of the horse's owner. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3602908 Horse and rider. Culture: Cypriot. Dimensions: H. 6 1/16 in. (15.4 cm). Date: early 4th century B.C..The figurine, in the Kourion style, is handmade and solid. The rider's face is mold-made. The horse's head may be mold-made as well. The horse has a large head with depressions for the nostrils, a slit mouth, and a prominent forelock between the ears. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3649436 Bell (Ekure). Culture: Edo. Dimensions: 14 15/16 × 6 11/16 × 4 3/16 in. (37.9 × 17 × 10.6 cm). Date: early 19th-mid 19th century.Elaborate hand bells like this one are extremely rare, especially with equestrian depictions symbolizing male achievement. Such a bell was probably made for a lesser member of the royal entourage as it is a single, not double bell and is made of brass not ivory. The bell is clapperless so its ring (pitch g1 -g above middle c) is produced by striking its outer surface when it is used at annual courtly ceremonial functions to assist in repelling evil spirits. The unusually elaborate decoration of the bell and handle includes small crotal bells vertically aligned along the edges border, a leopard head (symbol of royal power) flanking each side of the oval mouth, and an interlaced pattern filling band at lip. The front is dominated by a horse and rider in relief-his left hand holding a staff, his right holding the reigns, the horse's neck and head emerge from the bell's surface three dimensionally. The back features in relief a crocodile, a symbol of the Oba and his connection to Olokun (sea god) a theme repeated at the end of the bell's handle. The bell's surface treatment sets the figures against a stippled background with a vine-like meanders and on the back a floral (tulip) pattern. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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les17010228 Detail of horse's armour 17-01-02 / 27, mascaron with steel-tip in its mouth. Part of Farnese Armour, made for Alessandro Farnese (1545-1592), famous general and governor of the Netherlands. 1578. See 17-01-02 / 1-28. Milan workshop, bluesteel, gold and silver, Inv. A 1132. Author: PICCININO, LUCIO. Location: Kunsthistorisches Museum, Ruestkammer, Vienna, Austria.
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iblman01809150 Horse's mouth, Leonhardi procession, Bad Toelz, Isarwinkel, Upper Bavaria, Bavaria, Germany, Europe
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alb3656694 Curb Bit. Culture: German. Dimensions: H. 22 in. (55.9 cm); W. 6 1/8 in. (15.6 cm); Wt. 3 lb. 5.9 oz. (1528 g). Date: 17th century.This bit was used for the training of young horses and starting them with the curb bit. Despite their impressive aspect, the straight elongated shanks were in fact thought to be more gentle on the horse, because of the longer reaction time in their leverage effect and the fact that they were stopped by the horse's chest at some point. Curb bits were also used with a very light hand, the well-trained horses responding by anticipation to the slightest move of the reins. The scatches, (flattened triangular elements composing this mouthpiece), were slightly stronger in their effect and more resistant than the traditional conical canons also used at the time. The banquets, the parts of the cheekpieces to which the mouthpiece is attached, can be opened for switch out the mouthpiece, a feature particularly appreciated on dressage bits in Germany.At the beginning of the training, this bit would have been combined with a cavesson, a rigid noseband, often made of iron, resting on the horse's nose, a sensitive area. The rider would use his cavesson's reins at the same time he used his bit's, teaching the young horse to respond to the bit without spoiling the sensitivity of its mouth.Though long straight cheekpieces were used in all of Europe for training young horses, in Germany and Hungary alone they took on extreme proportions, sometimes up to 20 in. (50.8 cm). Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3651943 Snaffle Bit. Culture: German. Dimensions: H. 4 1/4 in. (10.8 cm); W. 8 3/4 in. (22.2 cm); Wt. 8.3 oz. (235.3 g). Date: late 16th - early 17th century.This full-cheek bit has simple articulated canons, arched for giving more comfort to the tongue. The snaffle bit is the simplest type of horse bit, and has an effect on the bars (part of the horses' jaw without teeth) and the corners of the lips. The rings on the sides would serve to hang the bit on the headstall and attach the reins. The cheekpieces press on the side of the mouth when a rein is pulled, helping indicating the direction to the horse and keeping the rings from pulling through the horse's mouth.According to contemporary equestrian manuals, this bit was probably used as a racing bit. It is virtually identical to some bit used until today. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3643407 Curb Bit. Culture: Mexican. Dimensions: H. 8 3/4 in. (22.2 cm); W. 5 in. (12.7 cm); Wt. 1 lb. 1.4 oz. (493.3 g). Date: first half 19th century.The shanks of this particularly elegant bit are shaped as waving serpents, their bodies inlaid in silver and their eyes with red stone. More serpents adorn the slobber bar and the chains for attaching the reins. The purchases are chiseled and decorated with a silver rose on each.This bit is a Mexican version of a spade bit (type of mouthpiece from California), the spade being the flat extension at the top pressing against the horse's palate when the reins are pulled. The small copper pendants had the purpose of 'entertaining' the horse, who, by playing with it with its tongue, would salivate and relax its jaw. Moreover, copper, reacting by electrolysis with the warmth and the moisture of the mouth, has a pleasant taste to horses and helps them to accept the bit. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3639327 Curb Bit. Culture: German. Dimensions: H. 18 in. (45.7 cm); W. 7 in. (17.8 cm); Wt. 3 lb. 1.4 oz. (1400.5 g). Date: 17th century.According to contemporary equestrian manuals, this was a bit designed for large horses with a hard mouth, a thick tongue, thin lips and non-sensitive bars (part of the horses' jaw without teeth). The gooseneck canons of the mouthpiece were meant to give more freedom to the tongue. The banquets, the parts of the cheekpieces where the mouthpiece is attached, can be opened to switch out the mouthpiece -- a feature particularly appreciated on dressage bits in Germany. If the very long shanks look impressive, and would logically add more leverage effect, and so more strength, they would actually have been blocked at some point by the horse's chest, reducing their impact. Curb bits were also at this time used with a very light hand, the well-trained horses responding by anticipation to the slightest move of the reins. This bit was very likely used for horse training and dressage. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3475217 Horse Bit, 7th–9th century, Made in Andalusia, Spain, Visigothic or Byzantine, Iron inlaid with copper alloy, gold, and silver, Overall: 10 5/8 x 7 1/16 x 5 5/16 in. (27 x 18 x 13.5 cm), Metalwork-Iron, This elaborately decorated bit, resembling the spade bit used by some (Western-style) riders today, has a large projecting tongue, or port, that would have been inserted into the horse’s mouth. The bridle was attached to the moveable rectangular plaques, while the reins were strung through the rings on the straight bar, beneath the horse’s jaw.
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alb3444250 Horse and rider, Cypro-Classical II, early 4th century B.C., Cypriot, Terracotta; mold-made and hand-made, H. 6 1/16 in. (15.4 cm), Terracottas, The figurine, in the Kourion style, is handmade and solid. The rider's face is mold-made. The horse's head may be mold-made as well. The horse has a large head with depressions for the nostrils, a slit mouth, and a prominent forelock between the ears.
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MMDHOMO_EC004 THE HORSE'S MOUTH, Alec Guinness, Kay Walsh, 1958
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MMDHOMO_EC003 THE HORSE'S MOUTH, Alec Guinness, Mike Morgan, 1958
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MMDHOMO_EC002 THE HORSE'S MOUTH, Michael Gough, Alec Guinness, 1958
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MMDHOMO_EC001 THE HORSE'S MOUTH, Alec Guinness, 1958.
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MCDHOMO_EC049 THE HORSE'S MOUTH, British poster art, Alec Guinness, 1958
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MCDHOMO_EC047 THE HORSE'S MOUTH, US poster art, Alec Guinness, 1958
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MCDHOMO_EC050 THE HORSE'S MOUTH, US poster art, Alec Guinness, 1958
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MBDHOMO_EC020 THE HORSE'S MOUTH, Alec Guinness, 1958
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MBDHOMO_EC017 THE HORSE'S MOUTH, from left, Alec Guinness, Kay Walsh, 1958
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akg2349966 Guinness, Alec Sir, London 2.4.1914 - Midhurst 5.8.2000, British actor. Alex Guiness (film still. Film: The. Horse's Mouth, GB 1958, director:. Ronald Neame). Photo. Copyright: For editorial use only.
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alb2163360 Original Film Title: THE HORSE'S MOUTH. Spanish Title: GENIO ANDA SUELTO, UN. English Title: THE HORSE'S MOUTH. Portuguese Title: MALUCO GENIAL. Film Director: RONALD NEAME. Year: 1958.
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PCL109900 "Seeing is Believing. Nervous old gent (buying a horse for business purposes). ""But are you sure the animal is only five years old?"" Indignant dealer. ""Don't you take my word for it, guv'nor. Open 'is mouth and look for yourself!""" *** Local Caption *** Seeing is Believing
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