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Rosary bead or rosary pendant, 2 faces (chapelet) (Side 2)

Rosary bead or rosary pendant, 2 faces (chapelet) (Side 2)
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Side 1

Subject
Secular. Memento mori.

Repository Institution
www.mfa.org

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Boston, Museum of Fine Arts

57.589

Ivory (or bone?)

Height: 76mm

Side 1: couple embracing (lovers); wall.
Side 2: bust-length skeleton (Death).
Inscription on the base: 'O MORS QUAM AMARA EST MEMORIA' ('Death, how bitter it is to be reminded of you').
Foliated decoration.

Ann Arbor 1975: French or Flemish, c. 1520.
Detroit 1997: Franco-Flemish style, 19th century (?).
Museum's opinion 2011: c. 1500-1550.


Attribution
Unknown

Reverse
Carved in the round.

Comments
The authenticity of this piece has been questioned by Barnet because the base and the object are made from a single piece of ivory, which does not agree with medieval practice, and because the piece is not carved for suspension, but has an ivory loop at the top (Detroit 1997).

Provenance
M. H. Drey, Ltd., London (in 1957); sold in 1957 by Drey to the Museum of Fine Arts for $1,000 (William E. Nickerson Fund).

Bibliography
R. von Forrer, 'Memento Mori - Kleinkunstwerke', in Zeitschrift für Schweizerische Archaeologie und Kunstgeschichte 2 (1940), pp. 129-33.
Europe in Torment: 1450-1550, exhibition catalogue, Providence, Rhode Island School of Design Museum, 6 March-7 April 1974, no. 41-1.
The Secular Spirit: Life and Art at the End of the Middle Ages, exhibition catalogue, New York, The Cloisters, Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1975, p. 259 (in relation to no. 254).
Images of Love and Death in Renaissance and Late Medieval Art, exhibition catalogue, ed. by W. R. Levin, Ann Arbor, University of Michigan, November 1975-January 1976, no. 82, pl. XXXIX.
Images in Ivory. Precious Objects of the Gothic Age, ed. by Peter Barnet, exhibition catalogue, Detroit, The Detroit Institute of Arts, and Baltimore, The Walters Art Gallery, 1997, p. 278.


Image

Photograph © 15 July 2012 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
Credit Line: William E. Nickerson Fund.

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