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Openwork panel (part of a casket), 1 register, 2 arches across (plaque ajourée) (Front)

Openwork panel (part of a casket), 1 register, 2 arches across (plaque ajourée) (Front)
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Front

Front

Front

Front, panels as arranged on acquisition

Subject
Secular. Courtly love.

Repository Institution
www.vam.ac.uk

To purchase an image
www.vandaimages.com


London, Victoria and Albert Museum

284-1867

Ivory

Height: 75 mm
Width: 85 mm

Seated lady holding a dog; seated youth with a hawk on his wrist.
Architecture; elaborate tracery; pinnacles.


Koechlin Number: 1280

Griggs 1904-1907: France, 14th century.
Koechlin 1924: probably England, end of 14th century or beginning of 15th century.
Longhurst 1929: England, end of the 14th century or beginning of the 15th century.
Leeuwenberg 1969: France, late 18th century or early 19th century.
Williamson and Davies 2014: France (Paris), 2nd half of the 14th century.


Attribution
Master of the Agrafe Forgeries (Leeuwenberg 1969)

Reverse
Flat and smooth. Inscription: '131' on reverse of the male figure.

Object Condition
Missing: quatrefoil in the window tracery above the female figure.
Holes for lost fittings.

Comments
Other panels from this casket are in the Victoria and Albert Museum (Inv. 284a-1867 and 284b-1867), the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (17.190.194) and the Museo Nazionale del Bargello, Florence (Inv. 118 C and Inv. 119 C). See related objects.
It would probably have decorated one of the ends of the casket.

Provenance
In the possession of John Webb (b. 1799, d. 1880), London, by 1862: purchased from him by the Museum in 1867.

Bibliography
Catalogue of the Special Exhibition of Works of Art of the Mediaeval, Renaissance, and more recent periods on loan at the South Kensington Museum, June 1862..., revised edition, exhibition catalogue (London, 1863), no. 131
W. Maskell, Ivories Ancient and Mediaeval in the South Kensington Museum (London, 1872), p. 116.
The South Kensington Museum (London, 1881), pl. 37.
W. Griggs, Portfolio of Ivories [London, 1904-1907], pt. XXXIII.
A. Maskell, Ivories (Connoisseurs Library), (London, 1905), pl. XXVII.
R. Koechlin, Les Ivoires gothiques français (Paris, 1924), I, p. 484; II, no. 1280; III, pl. CCXVII.
M. Longhurst, English Ivories (London, 1926), no. LIX, pp. 55, 110, pl. 48.
M. Longhurst, Catalogue of Carvings in Ivory, Victoria and Albert Museum, 2 vols (London, 1927 and 1929), II (1929), pp. 8-9, pl. II.
D. D. Egbert, 'North Italian Gothic Ivories in the Museo Cristiano of the Vatican Library', in Art Studies 7 (1929), p. 198, note 4.
Exhibition of English Mediaeval Art, exhibition catalogue, London, Victoria and Albert Museum, 1930, no. 458.
J. Leeuwenberg, 'Early Nineteenth-Century Gothic Ivories', in Aachener Kunstblätter, 39 (1969), p. 141.
B. Chiesi, Catalogo degli avori gotici del Museo Nazionale del Bargello (unpublished PhD thesis - Università degli Studi di Firenze, 2011), pp. 79-81, 394, 396-97, 404.
J. Warren, Medieval and Renaissance Sculpture in the Ashmolean Museum, 3 vols (Oxford, 2014), Vol. 2: Sculptures in Stone, Clay, Ivory, Bone and Wood, pp. 594-5, in relation to no. 179.
C. T. Little , ‘The Art of Gothic Ivories: Studies at the Crossroads,’ in The Sculpture Journal 23.1 (2014), p. 24.
P. Williamson and G. Davies, Medieval Ivory Carvings 1200-1550 (London, 2014), no. 231.


Image

© Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

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