Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
The coat of arms and inscription cast into the breach (back end) of this model cannon indicates that it was ordered by or presented to Hans Reischperger, the master of artillery for the Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II. Reischperger might have used it for courtly amusement or firing salutes. Conversely, it may have been a scaled-down model presented to Reischperger by a gun founder (cannon maker) with hopes of gaining commissions from the master artilleryman for full-size artillery. Cannons were costly and often treated like works of art. Its fine modeling and chasing of the ornament are exemplary of the craft. For example, the snake slithering along the top of the barrel is an artful play on the class of long-barreled cannon called a culverin after the French for grass snake.
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Dutch — Model Field Cannon with Carriage
Dodemant — Model Cannon (Culverin)
Central European — Model of a Bronze Field Cannon
Germain Pilon — Model Artillery with Field Carriage
South German, probably Augsburg — Walking Stick-Hammer-Sword
Johann Georg Maucher — Wheellock Rifle of Emperor Leopold I
German School — Wheellock Carbine for the Bodyguard of Wolf
German — Wheellock Rifle
Italian, Venice — Quiver in Mideastern Manner with Associate
Flemish — Pellet Crossbow
Polish, Silesia, Teschen — Wheellock Gun of Tschinke Form
Scottish, Dundee — Snaphance Pistol