Siglio

Matthias Buchinger: "The Greatest German Living": By Ricky Jay Whose Peregrinations in Search of the "Little Man of Nuremberg" are Herein Revealed

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Siglio

Matthias Buchinger: "The Greatest German Living": By Ricky Jay Whose Peregrinations in Search of the "Little Man of Nuremberg" are Herein Revealed

Sold out
  • Description

Matthias Buchinger (1674–1739) performed on more than a half-dozen musical instruments, some of his own invention.

He exhibited trick shots with pistols, swords and bowling. He danced the hornpipe and deceived audiences with his skill in magic.

He was a remarkable calligrapher specializing in micrography―handsome, precise letters almost impossible to view with the naked eye―and he drew portraits, coats of arms, landscapes and family trees, many commissioned by royalty.

Amazingly, Buchinger was just 29 inches tall, and born without legs or arms. He lived to the ripe old age of 65, survived three wives, wed a fourth and fathered 14 children.

Accompanying the Metropolitan Museum of Art exhibition Wordplay: Matthias Buchinger’s Inventive Drawings from the Collection of Ricky Jay, the book is a cabinet containing a single, multifaceted wonder, refracted through author Ricky Jay’s scholarship and storytelling.

Alongside an unprecedented and sumptuously reproduced selection of Buchinger’s marvelous drawings and etchings, Jay delves into the history and mythology of the "Little Man," while also chronicling his encounters with the many fascinating characters whom he meets in his passionate search for Buchinger.

Author: Ricky Jay / Matthias Buchinger
Publisher: Siglio
Pages: 160pp
Size: 8 x 10
Notes: hardcover, b/w
Release Date: February 23, 2016
ISBN: 978-1938221125