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Since the 1960s, renowned art historian Christian Theuerkauff has conducted groundbreaking research into small sculptures by both established and lesser-known artists ��ome identified by
Theuerkauff for the first time. His works are today widely considered to be standard references in the field.
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In honor of Theuerkauff's seventy-fifth birthday, Regine Marth and Marjorie Trusted have brought together a diverse group of art historians from Germany, the United States, Great Britain,
Italy, France, Spain, and Scandinavia to present the latest insights on sculpture and applied art from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century. In view of Theuerkauff's wide-ranging
interests, the twenty-eight essays��omplemented by ample illustrations��onsider a similarly broad range of topics, including ivory sculptures and carvings, clay pieces, and marble and bronze
works. Among the artists included are Gert van Egen, Francis van Bossuit, Balthasar Griebmann, David Le Marchand, Jean Cavalier, and Simon Troger.
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