Katharina Fritsch

German (Essen, Germany, 1956)

Kind mit Pudeln (Baby with Poodles)

1995/1996
sculpture | plaster, foil, polyurethane, and paint
Not currently on view in the museum
Kind mit Pudeln (Child with Poodles)

Four circles of 224 poodles, arranged in tight, densely packed rings, surround an infant poised on an eight-pointed gold star. The points of the star create eight radiating axes by which the poodles are aligned. The result is a stunning visual play of repetitive patterns in space.

Fritsch's intention is to lodge an indelible visual image in the mind of the viewer, indissolubly fusing experience and memory. Although some viewers may find the poodles threatening, they also appear to be on alert watch, guarding over the child. And despite the ominous atmosphere, a strange undercurrent of humor is present in the quirky oddness of both the poodles and the baby.

Fritsch chose the poodle as a dog that is cute and beguiling but can also be aggressive and mean. Soon after completing the piece, she recalled that a poodle appears in the story of Faust, retold in a nineteenth-century novel by Johann Wolfgang Goethe that is known to every German schoolchild. While out walking, Faust sees a black poodle and brings it home, unknowingly inviting the devil into his study. The baby suggests the innocence of children at birth, untouched by evil and misfortune. As it begins the journey of life, it must face the tensions of civilization and the potential for corruption.


15 3/4 in. x 201 1/2 in. x 201 1/2 in. (40.01 cm x 511.81 cm x 511.81 cm)
Acquired 1996
Collection SFMOMA
Accessions Committee Fund: gift of Collectors Forum, Jean and Jim Douglas, Mimi and Peter Haas, Susan and Robert Green, Pam and Dick Kramlich, Vicki and Kent Logan, Helen and Charles Schwab, Norah and Norman Stone, and Judy and John Webb
© Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / VG Bild-Kunst Bonn, Germany
96.490.A-RRRRRRRRR
Keywords

circles, animals, dogs, poodles, children, babies, baby, sunbursts, black, patterns, Faust, menacing, protection


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