Moorish Dancer 3, The Astute Allach white porcelain figurine of a medieval costumed dancer
http://lod.ehri-project-test.eu/units/us-005578-irn524005 an entity of type: Record
Moorish Dancer 3, The Astute
Allach white porcelain figurine of a medieval costumed dancer
Moorish Dancer 3, The Astute
Allach white porcelain figurine of a medieval costumed dancer
approximately 1950
overall: Height: 8.625 inches (21.908 cm) | Width: 4.625 inches (11.748 cm) | Depth: 4.750 inches (12.065 cm)
Allach porcelain jester figurine acquired by Adelia W. and Davis O. Morris when they lived in Munich, Germany, as part of the US Army occupation force from 1950-1953. One evening, a man came to their door with the figurine, offering it in trade. He gave it to the Morris's in exchange for a bag of coffee. This is model three of five figures in the Jester series, known as Zaddelrock or Moriskentanzer III, the Astute, produced in 1941. Allach Porcelain and the artist Richard Förster were commissioned by the city of Munich in 1937 to reproduce scaled-down figures of a 1480 Gothic sculpture created by Erasmus Grasser for the Dance House in Munich. The Moriskens were never for public sale, but were made exclusively for the city of Munich as gifts for visiting dignitaries. The city paid Allach 20 Reich Marks for each completed Morisken. Five of the ten figures were put into production. The Allach Porcelain Factory was taken over by the SS in 1936 and was under the direct control of Heinrich Himmler. The first factory was at Allach, a subcamp of Dachau concentration camp. A second production site was set up at Dachau to specialize in figurines. The factories were sub-camps of Dachau concentration camp, with camp inmates supplying the forced labor.