Physical description
Rectangular casket of poplar(?) with a rounded and splayed lid and splayed plinth, covered on all sides except the bottom with marquetry of one type of wood, horn (the black areas), unstained and green-stained bone in geometric patterns.
The round arched lid is covered with a diaper of squares surrounded by a 'woven' border of intersecting lines, and a flat edge border of hexagons and moulded edge of uncoloured bone. Below the hinged lid is a splayed opening, on the outside of which is a small vertical zig-zag band in bone and mahogany(?), above a large horizontal zig-zag in bone and ebony(?). The front, back and sides of the coffer are all decorated with a panle of illusionistic six-pointed stars (uncoloured bone, green-stained bone and ebony(?), framed by a border of hexagons. Running up the arris of each corner is a thick band of alternating uncoloured bone and ebony(?). The splayed base has a band of '3-d' Greek key ornament, between narrow bands of bone, wood, angled 'dentils' and green-stained bone, and a plinth moulding with sections of uncoloured bone separated by narrow strips of ebony(?). The bottom is stained black. The interior is partly lined with a dark red silk fabric.
Construction
The casket is veneered on a carcase of nailed and pegged poplar(?), using both lap and mitred joints. The arched section of the lid appears to have been cut from the solid. The lid is held on two iron ring hinges and an added ribbon stop .The geometrical veneer is assembled from larger individual tesserae, and, for the smaller motifs 'slices' or tiles of rod or bundle marquetry.
Place of Origin
Venice, Italy (made)
Date
ca. 1550 (made)
Artist/maker
unknown (production)
Materials and Techniques
Wood veneered with wood, horn and bone (stained and unstained)
Dimensions
Height: 22.2 cm, Width: 42.7 cm, Depth: 27 cm
Object history note
Bought from R. Duseigneur, 18 Rue Seguier, Paris in 1904 for £25 - 15 - 3.
See also VA 2568-1856, for a closely comparable casket
Historical context note
This type of geometric tarsia was found in Islamic Spain, where it was produced as early as the 10th century; the workshops of Cordoba and later Granada seem to have specialised in the technique. (See J.Bloom et al.: exh. cat. The Minbar from the Kutubiyya Mosque (New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1998), pp.20-22; Mariam Rosser-Owen, Islamic Arts from Spain (London 2010), p.65) It was used for large objects such as pulpits and doors, and small objects such as combs, caskets, and possibly gamesboards though none have survived.
The technique was used from the early 14th century in Italy (often described as 'certosina' work), on objects associated with the Venetian Embriachi workshop, which typically combined geometrical marquetry with low relief figurative panels carved in bone, on altarpieces and domestic objects such as caskets and gamesboards. The term tarsia derives from the Arabic 'tarsi', meaning 'incrustation'.
To make the tiles, thin rods of different coloured woods and bone, pre-cut into shapes such as squares and triangles, were glued together lengthwise and then sawn across the 'grain' into tiles. This technique was less labour intensive than another technique of assembling tiny pieces into a mosaic. (See See J. Bloom et al.: exh. cat. The Minbar from the Kutubiyya Mosque (New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1998), pp.7-14 and 93; A. Wilmering, The Gubbio Studiolo and its conservation, II: Italian renaissance intarsia and the conservation of the Gubbio Studiolo (New York, 1999), p.64; Rosser Owen p.64
Peter Thornton, in The Italian Renaissance Interior 1400-1600 (London 1991), p.92 suggests that geometric inlay (also developed as marquetry), in a style derived from the Near East, was confined to small panels until the early 15th century. He uses the term 'lavoro di intarsio', noting 9n.6) that 'allo certosino' is the frequently used 20th century term: "It was such a widespread technique that it cannot have been confined to workshops in Carthusian monasteries - or to monasteries generally. On the other hand, a surprising number of monks became celebrated experts in the fully-developed [figurative] 'lavoro di intarsio' during the second half of the 15th century. Many travelled and set up workshops whenever needed; few were confined to monasteries during their active life."
Descriptive line
Wood casket inlaid with small pieces of partly stained wood and bone, Venice, ca. 1550
Materials
Wood; Bone; Horn
Techniques
Joining; Marquetry; Stained
Categories
Containers; Woodwork
Collection code
FWK