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Showing posts with label 'Museum aan het Vrijthof'. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 'Museum aan het Vrijthof'. Show all posts

Monday, 26 November 2012

ROCOCO ORNAMENTAL CARVING | ROCOCO WOODCARVING | Rococo Carving Style








Patrick Damiaens
Ornamental woodcarver 

Rococo Style of Ornament




















ROCOCO WOODCARVING ,Commissioned by the Museum aan het Vrijthof in Maastricht
 
A rococo style ornament for the core collection of the Museum aan het Vrijthof in Maastricht (NL).  
Patrick Damiaens has been a professional woodcarver for 25 years and is well versed in ornamentation and the carving of ornaments. He was exclusively commissioned by the new Museum aan het Vrijhof in Maastricht (NL). 

After careful consideration, the curator of the Museum aan het Vrijthof and several sponsors decided to purchase one of his artworks. This piece is to become a part of the core collection of the Museum, which surely is to be regarded as a great honour. The Museum aan het Vrijthof in Maastricht has recently been renovated and is now three times as large.
The Museum has devoted a section to the arts and crafts of the 18th century. Interestingly enough it’s not only about the artwork on display. Over the past few months, the entire history of the creation and development of this art piece was captured by a Dutch film crew. 


They will now edit the footage, providing the Museum with an educational film to accompany the artwork. This allows the visitors of the Museum to gain a better understanding of the complexity of Patrick’s profession. The opening of the Museum aan het Vrijthof will take place on 15 March 2012, on the eve of the TEFAF 'European Fine Art Fair', which is also the main sponsor of the Museum.

article in a Belgian newspaper

'The museum Aan het Vrijthof 'in Maastricht (Netherlands)


'Made in Maastricht'
The main focus of Museum aan het Vrijthof is ‘500 Years Made in Maastricht’; 500 years of creativity and enterprise. By means of authentic stories and tangible memories from five centuries of arts and crafts and manufacturing industry, the history of Maastricht’s cultural identity is presented and visualised. The witnesses’ views on the events and conditions of their time express the spirit of the age and allow the visitor to reflect upon history. 
The visitor starts his journey through 500 Years Made in Maastricht in the recent past. He is taken from room to room through time in a reversed chronology, all-in line with the buildings’ history. Each guest will be given an RFID chip (Radio Frequency Identification). This chip traces the exact position of the visitor and can be tuned to the language of preference. The building will respond to the visitor’s presence, without any action required by the visitor. This technique allows you to see and hear bygone times in a subtle and invisible way. 
 
 
Artistic craft during the ancien régime

Around the 1850s, Maastricht is much like it was three centuries earlier with regard to the social and economic viewpoint. The guilds, which were called trades in Maastricht, were flourishing. Knowledge and skills were passed on from teacher to pupil, and consequently maintained and supervised by means of a form of self-regulation. Next to that, the trades offered an interpersonal cohesion between their members. Guild members were sworn members, which implied that they were committed to each other by means of a mutual oath. ‘Sjariteit’, solidarity and cooperation were the key notions. The trades did not only pursue to regulate the professional lives of their members, but also their political, religious, social and private ambitions.
Maastricht

In these days, the Maastricht elite surrounded themselves with the finest furniture, silverware and timepieces in order to hold up their social status and embellish their daily lives. Eighteenth-century Maastricht was a city of artisans d’art, of decorative craftsmen, which we know by name now – except for the furniture makers – as they provided their objects with signs or signatures. Silversmiths, clockmakers and furniture makers, together with their colleagues in the Euregion, have translated the French Regency style in their own specific way and produced silver candleholders by order of the elite, and sometimes even as a series. 
With respect to decorative weaponry, Maastricht weapon makers have been renowned as early as the seventeenth century, a time in which exclusive ivory pistols were sent as gifts to European courts. The eighteenth century has mainly seen oak pistols equipped with subtle and elegant carving, which were worn as a showpiece. 
Text Museum aan het Vrijthof.


From a block of oak, Patrick created a rococo appliqué with the head of an angel. The design of the ornament – provided on paper by the curator –  was made up in German rococo style. Patrick has endeavoured to create something of great beauty. Height: 33cm. Width: 25cm. Thickness: 5cm. Made of oak. 

The following pictures show a few of the stages of the development process. 

The actual basis, this is our example


There will be a sketch made


  


Sawing with the jigsaw




Shaping the asymmetric palmette


The modeling of the flowers


The modeling of the Putti's head









The Rococo Applique is done


Rococo carving for the Museum at the Vrijthof




website




Member of Pearls of Craftsmanship

Thursday, 25 October 2012

THE MUSEUM AAN HET VRIJTHOF | MUSEUM IN MAASTRICHT | Spaans Government Museum

Patrick Damiaens
Ornamental Woodcarver 

The Museum aan het Vrijthof in Maastricht (Netherlands)
 
Formerly Spanish Government Museum. 
The pictures were taken for the major restoration of 2010-2012.












Visiting Museums and Castles is Probably the main source of inspiration for the Ornamental Woodcarver.

These are places where the craftsman gets his ideas, he is looking for new challenges and always new unexpected surprises, and even after 25 years still feels something new to learn.

 

Exploring and studying ,looking at problems and how your colleagues 300 years ago solved them, their knowledge of  tasteful proportions used in the interior decoration and their knowledge of carving techniques.
 
In the 25 years that I am a ornamental woodcarver, you know by now where , and in which museum or castle, what kind of ornament, decoration style, character, quality is available . Or in which castle there is possible change to take pictures or .... when it is required too take notes or drawings .



In this blog item we visit the Museum aan het Vrijhof in Maastricht.

















Museum aan het Vrijthof takes its name from Maastricht's most familiar square, on witch the Museum occupies a prominent place. The Museum is located in a sixteenth-century chapter house called the Spanish Government House. 




The coats of arms above the windows on the first flour and the carved relief ornamented by portrait medallions of Charles V and his wife on the inner courtyard side recall the fact that this King of spain / German Kaizer / Duke of Brabant had his pied-à-terre in the Spanish Governement House. 

In the Museum aan het Vrijthof, the visitor can wander through the eighteenth-century period rooms to discover how the Maastricht elite lived in this period and to view the collection of eighteenth-century pistols, clocks, furniture and table silver made in the city of Maastricht. 




The museum aan het Vrijthof has regular exhibitions devoted to themes from five centuries of Maastricht arts and crafts.

The Museum aan het Vrijhof before the restoration of  2010-2012




More information Museum aan het Vrijhof  WEBSITE





WEBSITE

Tuesday, 31 July 2012

CARVING A ROCOCO-ORNAMENT | Museum aan het Vrijthof | Patrick Damiaens Ornamental Woodcarver

Ornamental Woodcarver Patrick Damiaens
Carving a ROCOCO - ornament in oak
For the Museum aan het Vrijthof 
in Maastricht (Netherlands)
  









The museum is a historical house on the famous Vrijthof square with something for both tourists and the residents of Maastricht. The museum presents the history of those who lived in the city of Maastricht in the form of art works and in beautifully designed everyday objects from furniture to horsemen's guns, from silver candelabras to watches. The interior of the room makes way a few times each year for exhibitions. 

However, the focus always lies on the five centuries of the entire city of Maastricht’s cultural identity. It is a history we display to be discovered, explained and experienced. That is the reason the Museum aan het Vrijthof, which up until recently was also known as the Museum of the Spanish Government, exists. 
Drink in the spirit of Maastricht. Feel the history. Admire arts and crafts from the past. Lose yourself in the sensation of becoming part of life in the 18th century. You will be given the opportunity to gain knowledge, to see where the connections lie, and to simply enjoy so many of the beautiful things produced by Maastricht’s artists and craftsmen in the past.



WOODCARVING: Patrick Damiaens  at the " Museum Aan Het Vrijthof "   Maastricht in the Netherlands.Patrick Damiaens at work.
The making of an Rococo-ornament in oak.









WOODCARVING : Patrick Damiaens (Belgium)  made a German Rococo Applique for this Museum in Maastricht  in the Netherlands . The work will be displayed in the permanent collection of the museum together with this film. To give the visitor a better picture of the complexity of the work of a mastercraftsman. 

More info at


  This little movie was made by producer Vincent Oudendijk  


Main sponsor of the Museum renovation is 
 "The European Fine Art  Fair "  
The TEFAF Maastricht .

http://www.tefaf.com
https://www.patrickdamiaens.info