502 IVORY AND THE ELEPHANT 



could be covered with a fly's wing, and 

 of a ship that could be placed beneath 

 the wing of a bee. 



Kanachus. Made ivory and gold statue in 

 Sikyon. 



Kauzmann. Brothers of that name from 

 Geislingen. Pokal of ivory and gold 

 after design by H. Peter is figured in 

 Sdchsische Gewerbezeitung, 1893, p. 

 16. 



Kehrer, E., of Erbach school. Eighteenth 

 century. 



Kern, Leonhard. Born in 1588; died in 

 1663. Of German birth. Resided in 

 Italy. 



Khalaf. Moorish ivory carver of the 

 first half of the eleventh century. 

 Executed a beautiful cofFret, now 

 owned by Mr. John Malcolm of Poltal- 

 lock. 



Kirch, FREtrMUND. Worked in Vienna 

 about the middle of the seventeenth 

 century; made spinning wheels, cups, 

 etc. 



KiRCHNER, JoHANN WiLHELM. Lived in 

 Cassel in the last third of the eigh- 

 teenth century; oflBcial coin engraver. 

 Executed in ivory medallion portraits 

 of Landgrave Frederick II and his 

 wife; also anatomical studies of a man 

 and a woman. 



Klammer, Nikolatjs. Born in Vienna 

 in 1769; died m Graz, March 25, 1830. 

 Lived in Vienna until 1797, when he 

 settled in Graz. Developed micro- 

 technique to a wonderful degree. 

 Landscapes \vith trees, flowers, etc., 

 the details being so fine as to be some- 

 times only recognizable through a 

 magnifying glass. 



Kleinert, Frederick. Died in 1714. 

 Of Nuremberg. 



Klesecker (Glessckher), Justus. Born 

 in Hamelin; died in Frankfort where 

 he had worked in 1653-54. Trav- 

 elled in the Netherlands and to Rome. 

 Executed crucifixes, etc. 



Knoll, Beunoni. Died in 1764. Made a 

 large carving in ivory representing the 

 Passion of Our Lord. 



Knoll, Michael, of Geislingen, where he 

 was living about 1780. Regarded as 

 the most distinguished ivory carver 

 there. Son of Beunoni Knoll. 



Kohler, Johann Christoph. a court 

 jeweller of Augustus the Strong. Lived 

 in Dresden. Statuettes in gold, ivory, 

 and enamel. In the Griine Gewolbe 

 are figures of a cobbler, a potter, a 



knife grinder, etc.; also a lace maker, 

 known as Barbara L'ttmann. 



Koujpes. Made ivory table at Olympia. 



Krabenberger, , of Nymphenberg, 



Bavaria. Pupil of Troger. 



Krebar, Giovanni, of Padua. Lute. 

 Dated 1629. 



Krijger, Wilhelm, of Dantzig. Active 

 after 1711 in Dresden. Four statu- 

 ettes, the so-called, "Beggars of Coun- 

 tess Konigsmark," in the Griine 

 Gewolbe, Dresden; there is also there 

 a pokal with relief of Diana hunting. 



Krijger, Gottlieb Wilhelm. Carver of 

 amber and ivory. Dresden. Son of 

 Wilhelm Kriiger. 



Lacroix, C. a Burgundian; worked for a 

 long time in Genoa. Seventeenth 

 century. Crucifijces. No certain work 

 since the disappearance of the crucifix 

 on the high altar of Sta. Annunziata, 

 Genoa. Specimen of his work said to 

 have been shown in Paris Exposition, 

 1867; see Gazette des Beaux Arts, Vol. 

 XIX, p. 343. 



Lagae, Julius. Born in Brussels in 1865. 

 Pupil of J. Lambeaux of Brussels. 

 Exhibited in Brussels Exposition. 



Lafleur, Abel. Born at Rodez, dept. 

 Aveyron, France. Exhibited in Pan- 

 ama-Pacific International Exposition, 

 San Francisco, 1915. 



Lalique, Rene. The most celebrated of 

 the ornament workers in Paris; ivory 

 used principally for female heads or for 

 bodies. 



Lancetti, Lanciotto. Born in Perugia 

 in 1861; nephew of Federigo Lan- 

 cetti. Studied at Academy of Perugia 

 and became professor there. 



Lankhorst, . Ivory carver and 



silversmith in Amsterdam. 



Leborgne, . Exhibited in Musee 



Galliera, 1903. 



Lebraellier, Jean. His name is given 

 as that of an ivory carver in the in- 

 ventory of Charles V of France; last 

 half of fourteenth century. 



Lefebure, J. B., of Dieppe school; eigh- 

 teenth century. Christ in Musee 

 Galliera, 1903. 



Lefe%tie (Lefe^t;r), C. Exhibited in 

 Brussels Exposition. 



Legeret (Le Geret), Jean. Sculptor. 

 Born in 1628; died in 1688. Was in 

 Paris in 1683. Crucifixes. 



Legrain, C. Three Christs in Musee 

 Galliera, 1903. 



