A & A spacer courtauld institute of art
login profile preferences history searches sets
quick search go advanced search browse temp folder

Mirror case (valve de miroir) (Front)

Mirror case (valve de miroir) (Front)
enlarge image zoom image

Front

Subject
Secular. Courtly love.

Repository Institution
thewalters.org

To purchase an image
thewalters.org


Baltimore, Walters Art Museum

Inv. 71.193

Ivory

Height: 106mm (diameter)
Width: 106mm

Two courting couples (meeting of lovers); man embracing a lady; lady crowning a youth with a wreath; winged God of Love in a tree throwing arrows at lovers.
Corner terminals: four crouching monsters.

Randall 1985: England or Germany, 1340-1350.
Randall 1997: French, 1340-1350.
Museum's opinion 2010: England or Germany, 1340-1350.


Attribution
Unknown

Object Condition
Missing: part of the left side including the youth and two monsters (restored before 1924).

Comments
Stylistically close to British Museum, Dalton 360 Randall 1985).

Provenance
Collection of Louis Hugot: his sale, Drouot, Paris, 7 March 1924, lot 82; bought by Henry Walters from Henry Daguerre in Paris in 1924; Walters Art Museum, 1931, by bequest.

Bibliography
R. H. Randall, Masterpieces of Ivory from the Walters Art Gallery (New York, 1985), no. 328.
R. H. Randall Jr., 'Games on a Medieval Ivory', in Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University, 56 (1997), pp. 3-9 (p. 5, fig. 6).
J. Warren, Medieval and Renaissance Sculpture in the Ashmolean Museum, 3 vols (Oxford, 2014), Vol. 2: Sculptures in Stone, Clay, Ivory, Bone and Wood, p. 566, in relation to no. 163.


Image

© Walters Art Museum, Baltimore.

All images on this website are made available exclusively for scholarly and educational purposes and may not be used commercially.

spacer
add commentsadd / view
comments
spacer
email a linkemail a link
to this image
spacer
add to folderadd this image
to folder
spacer
save to setsave this image
to a set
spacer
Please remember to acknowledge any use of the site in publications and lectures as: 'Gothic Ivories Project at The Courtauld Institute of Art, London, www.gothicivories.courtauld.ac.uk', followed by the date you accessed the site.