Joseph Franz Pallenberg
A Bear
German Patinated Bronze
Sculpture
ca. 1920’s
Signed “Jos. Pallenberg”.
Black patina, original black
marble base.
Dimensions: Height: 8 inches (20cm) Width: 7.5 inches (18.75cm) Depth: 8.5 inches (21.25cm)
Joseph Franz Pallenberg | German, 1882-1946
Born in Cologne on 6 August 1882,
Josef Pallenberg was extremely interested in animals from an early age. A visit
to the Cologne zoo inspired the six-year-old child to begin drawing animals,
and attempts to model them followed soon after. Experiments at reconstructing
the skeletons of dead animals, which he first boiled in his mother’s saucepans,
were the starting point of a later studio that would become crammed with
skeletons and casts from nature. In 1899, Pallenberg, then just seventeen,
enrolled at the art academy in Düsseldorf, where he first studied drawing, but
soon switched to the sculpture class of Karl Janssen. While he was still a
student, his group ‘Boar hunt’ brought him his first critical acclaim in 1902,
when it was recommended for a gold medal at the Great Industrial Trade Fair in
Düsseldorf.
Pallenberg left the academy, as he did
not think too highly of his teacher, and went to Berlin, where Ludwig Heck, the
director of the Berlin zoo, who had formerly worked in Cologne, fully supported
his work. Carl Hagenbeck, the founder of the Hamburg zoo and inventor of
gateless enclosures, met the young Pallenberg in Berlin and commissioned him to
adorn the main entrance gate of his new zoo in Hamburg with large-scale animal
sculptures before its opening in 1907. It was Pallenberg’s early interest in
anatomy and his accuracy in capturing the animal’s attitude that brought him
the high praise of these zoologists. At the same time as creating the large
sculptures for Hamburg, Pallenberg modelled works such as the ‘Rominter stag’,
or ‘Roaring stag’, one of his best known works, for which he received the
golden state medal at the Deutsch-Nationale Kunstausstellung in Düsseldorf in
1907. A cast of this work is still on display at the Berlin zoo today.
Following the assignment for the
entrance gate in Hamburg, Hagenbeck commissioned life-sized sculptures of
dinosaurs from Pallenberg. With the help of his brothers, the artist executed
several monumental beasts in concrete, forming a park of these prehistoric
animals, reflecting what was known about them at the time. Pallenberg did not
work only in Germany. Following the Hamburg dinosaurs, he received an
invitation to La Plata in Argentina to create sculptures of local primeval
animals that were to be embossed in copper – unfortunately this commission fell
through due to lack of money. Pallenberg also repeatedly went to the United
States, studying the animals at the zoos in Cincinnati and Detroit, and
designing the exterior of the giraffe and hippopotamus houses in Detroit zoo in
the 1930s.
Pallenberg’s sculptures always
remained very close to nature. Quite often, it is possible to detect the
individual animal that he took as his model. He did not want to create a
stereotyped representative of any species, but mostly made actual portraits of
a specific beast. The range of animals he depicted is vast, including many rare
and endangered species. Horses, big cats and bears fascinated him particularly.
His oeuvre encompasses single animals as well as groups of two or more, shown
at rest, playing, fighting or hunting – an exceptional diversity in the work of
one artist. The sculptures are precise depictions of the animals’ anatomy and
movements as well as their behaviour. Pallenberg’s closeness to nature
repeatedly led to negative criticism as he was accused of mere mimicry. But,
regardless of these reproaches, he developed a high reputation and received
much acknowledgement, not only from scientists, but also for the artistic
achievements in his sculptures. Various awards and prizes decorated his studio,
where Pallenberg worked amongst many live animals, including a tame lion and a
wolf. He died in Düsseldorf on 26 June 1946.
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