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Imperial Austria: Treasures of Art, Arms and Armor from the State of Styria


Arms and Armor as Art Form
and the Decorated Surface



In addition to their obvious functions, arms and armor were measures of rank, wealth, and personal taste in the 15th through 17th centuries. Armor was so closely related to fashion that it sometimes paralleled it; pleats of civilian clothing were copied in Maximilian-style armor, for example, and armour design was adapted to accommodate the puffed breeches in style in the 17th century. Adept armor designers combined their fashion sense with impressive knowledge of defence, smithing, and human anatomy to produce beautiful yet functional protective equipment appropriate to the wearer's rank.




Both arms and armor provided surfaces for decorators who, infused with Renaissance and Baroque artistic energy, skilfully embellished the material. In metalworking centres such as Augsburg and Nuremberg, there was an active interchange among craftsmen. Etchers such as Daniel Hopfer (1470-1536) of Augsburg, to whose school the horse armor ornament is attributed, decorated many different kinds of metal surfaces such as armor, copperplates for printing on paper, and silver.

For their design sources, decorators relied on published Italian Renaissance motifs inspired by classical ornaments. Scrolls, arabesques, and grotesques were particular favourites. The moresque, based on Islamic designs, was also popular. Designs were applied to everything from arms and armor to wooden gun stocks inlaid with stag horn.



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Created: November 16, 1995. Last update: July 13, 2001
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