Mascaron (architecture)
In architecture, a mascaron ornament is a face, usually human, sometimes frightening or chimeric whose alleged function was originally to frighten away evil spirits so that they would not enter the building. The concept was subsequently adapted to become a purely decorative element. The most recent architectural styles to extensively employ mascarons were Beaux Arts and Art Nouveau. In addition to architecture, mascarons are used in the other applied arts.
Gallery
Details of the ancient frieze of the Portico of Tiberius (Aphrodisias, Turkey)
A Green Man corbel supporting the Bamberg Horseman, in the Bamberg Cathedral (Bamberg, Germany)
The Three gorgons on the Secession Building from Vienna (Austria)
Chandelier with mascarons, circa 1710–1715, in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (NYC)
Sculpted mascaron on the Palais Rohan (Strasbourg, France)
Mascaron above an oculi window upside an Art Nouveau door in Strasbourg
Art Nouveau mascaron from Paris
Mascaron on a corbel in Paris
Jugendstil straight-lined mascaron in Riga (Latvia) from 1906
Mascaron of the Central Bank of Russia, from Moscow
Mascaron on the Hungarian State Opera House, in Budapest
Mascaron of Hôtel du Commandant Militaire (Dijon, France)
Combination between a mascaron and cartouche, on the Staroměstská tržnice from Prague (Czech Republic)
Mascaron with a swag, on the Berlin Cathedral (Germany)
Bordeaux mascaron, quai Richelieu. The city presents more than 3,000 mascarons of the 18th and 19th centuries[circular reference]
Mascaron on the Castle of Enghien from the Parc d’Enghien from Belgium
See also