Calkins 1968: English, 14th century.
Ann Arbor 1976: English or French, 14th century (c. 1300-1340), in the style of the Parisian Master of the Death of the Virgin.
Randall 1993: English, 1340-1360.
Museum's opinion 2011: North French, 14th century.
Attribution
Style of the Master of the Death of the Virgin (Ann Arbor 1976).
Reverse
Carved on all sides.
Object Condition
Two deep vertical cracks in the left end panel.
Comments
The silver fittings have incised decoration.
Provenance
Said to have belonged to John Talbot (b. c. 1384-1390, d. 1453), 1st Earl of Shrewsbury; Collection of his son John, earl of Shrewsbury, and descendants (to the twentieth century). Bought by the Museum from Premsela and Hamburger, Amsterdam, in 1964 (Theodore Wilbour Fund in memory of Charlotte Beebe Wilbour).
Bibliography
R. G. Calkins, A Medieval Treasury: An Exhibition of Medieval Art from the Third to the Sixteenth Century, exhibition catalogue, White Museum of Art, Cornell University and M. W. Proctor Institute, Utica, 1968, no. 79.
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. 64, pl. IV.
Songs of Glory, exhibition catalogue, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Museum of Art, 1985, no. 80.
R. H. Randall, The Golden Age of Ivory: Gothic Ivory Carvings in North American Collections (New York, 1993), no. 190.
M. Gibson, The Liverpool Ivories: late antique and medieval ivory and bone carving in Liverpool Museum and the Walker Art Gallery (London, 1994), p. 99.
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.
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