Loof - Goat
Catalog #045 150×140×26cm
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A carved and painted carousel goat attributed to Charles I. D. Looff in a dynamic jumping pose — front legs raised, rear legs extended in a powerful push-off (reported). The body is painted in naturalistic muted grays, whites, and creams with dark charcoal mottled spots, reproducing a realistic goat coloring. The fur carving throughout the body is exceptionally fine — dense, flowing, and textured with a level of detail that ranks among the best carving in this collection. Two curved horns sweep upward and back from the head. A carved goatee hangs from the chin. Amber/brown glass eyes. Floppy ears. White muzzle with a pink nose. A red bridle with teal diamond accents and a round gold medallion at the cheek.
The trappings are elaborate. The saddle is dark maroon with a sweeping curved cantle that terminates in a carved and painted serpent head — green-bodied with a red eye and a beak-like mouth. This secondary carving is integral to the saddle structure, not a separate attachment, and is a distinctive decorative feature. The blanket is cream/buff with geometric trim in sage green, teal blue, silver, and maroon. Maroon saddle flaps bear teal-and-gold scrollwork. Gold fringe runs along the lower blanket edge. A maroon breast strap with teal diamond accents crosses the chest. The paint is in excellent condition, consistent with professional restoration.
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Purchased from "Rusty Donna Hugh" (phonetic approximation) at Americana Antiques (reported). No date or price has been provided. The owner notes that further information needs to be obtained from the seller (reported). The owner describes this as one of his favorite pieces and intended to display it in the house but has encountered difficulty with the stand because the pole is slanted rather than vertical (reported).
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Not established beyond the Americana Antiques sale. The seller's name is a phonetic approximation and will need clarification from the owner.
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Charles I. D. Looff produced approximately forty carousels between 1876 and 1916 (sourced). Looff's figures are known for lavish decoration, realistic carving, and elaborate trappings (sourced). Goats appear on several surviving Looff menagerie carousels, including the 1908 Looff carousel at Heritage Museums & Gardens in Sandwich, Massachusetts, which includes a goat described as a "prancer" — the only figure on that carousel with two legs on the ground (sourced). Goats were an uncommon but not unprecedented menagerie subject for Looff, and surviving examples are valued for their distinctive character.
The serpent-head secondary carving on the saddle cantle is a noteworthy feature. Secondary carvings — figures incorporated into trappings, saddles, or body decoration — are characteristic of high-quality American carousel production and indicate that this figure was likely intended for a prominent position on the carousel. The specific use of a serpent head as a cantle finial has no close documented parallel in the sources surveyed for this entry, though secondary carvings of animals and mythological figures on saddle cantles are known from several major American manufacturers.
The carving quality visible in the photographs — particularly the fur texture, the realistic proportions, and the integration of the secondary serpent carving — is consistent with a high-quality Looff menagerie figure. The paint scheme, while clearly a professional restoration, reflects a sophisticated color palette (maroon, teal, sage, gold) and disciplined brushwork.
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The paint is in excellent condition throughout, consistent with a professional restoration. The carved fur texture is crisp and well-preserved. No structural damage, cracks, or missing elements are visible in the photographs. The owner notes that the carousel pole is slanted rather than vertical, which is creating difficulty with display stand construction (reported). This angled pole position may reflect the figure's original mounting angle on the carousel platform.
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Low–Medium. The Looff attribution is reported by the owner but has not been independently verified. The carving quality and trapping style are consistent with high-quality American golden-age production. The owner intends to obtain additional information from the seller, which may strengthen or revise the attribution. The serpent-head secondary carving is a distinctive feature that may assist in identifying the specific source carousel.
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Owner interview recording (October 20, 2025): identifies the figure as a Looff goat, names the seller (phonetic), notes that further information is needed, and describes the display challenge
Nine photographs (DSC_2582 through DSC_2593): romance side, non-romance side, head close-ups from both sides, saddle detail, serpent-head cantle detail, measurement photo with tape, and whiteboard showing "#045" and "10/20/25"