The Agony in the Garden  thumbnail 1
Not currently on display at the V&A

The Agony in the Garden

House Altar
ca. 1700 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This house altar relief, representing the Agony in the Garden, was probably made in South Germany (perhaps Augsburg) or possibly in Austria, in about 1700. The maker of the ivory reliefs is anonymous, but the frame was made by Andreas Thelot. The composition is frequent in Italian art and the carving may be based on a 16th or 17th century painting or engraving.
This altar and the companion altar (A.94-1923) were noted in a memorandum at the time of acquisition as having 'considerable decorative value' (Museum records). They are analogous stylistically to over twenty other ivory reliefs of devotional subjects, which Theuerkauff has identified as a cohesive group.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleThe Agony in the Garden (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Ivory relief, in a wood, silver and tortoiseshell frame
Brief description
House altar, ivory relief, the Agony in the Garden, German (perhaps Augburg), or possibly Austria, ca. 1700
Physical description
Ivory relief representing the agony in the garden, in a frame of wood overlaid with silver, tortoiseshell and ivory. Christ is shown kneeling on the Mount of Olives; an angel facing him holds the chalice, while two more above hold the cross. A landscape background is suggested in low relief behind. A small oval silver relief of Christ as Man of Sorrows, seated on the cold stone, is set into the frame above the ivory relief, and an irregularly shaped rectangular silver cartouche showing Christ carrying the Cross is set into the frame below the ivory. The rest of the frame is decorated with tortoiseshell panels, silver strapwork, and ivory strips, many of them painted green, analogous to the decoration on the frame on A.94-1923.
Dimensions
  • Of the relief height: 11.5cm
  • Ivory relief alone width: 7cm
  • With frame height: 30cm
  • With frame width: 20.5cm
Object history
Bought for £12.10s. in 1923 from Edgar Charles Sumner Gibson (1848-1924), the 31st Bishop of Gloucester, St Giles House, Fareham, Hampshire. (A.94-1923 was also bought for £12. 10s. at the same time, the combined price for both therefore being £25).
Subjects depicted
Summary
This house altar relief, representing the Agony in the Garden, was probably made in South Germany (perhaps Augsburg) or possibly in Austria, in about 1700. The maker of the ivory reliefs is anonymous, but the frame was made by Andreas Thelot. The composition is frequent in Italian art and the carving may be based on a 16th or 17th century painting or engraving.
This altar and the companion altar (A.94-1923) were noted in a memorandum at the time of acquisition as having 'considerable decorative value' (Museum records). They are analogous stylistically to over twenty other ivory reliefs of devotional subjects, which Theuerkauff has identified as a cohesive group.
Associated object
A.94-1923 (Ensemble)
Bibliographic references
  • Longhurst, Margaret H. Catalogue of Carvings in Ivory. London: Published under the Authority of the Board of Education, 1927-1929, Part II, p. 92
  • Theuerkauff, C. Elfenbein: Sammlung Reiner Winkler. Munich, 1984, pp. 162-163, no. 9, footnote 9
  • Cf. Burlington Fine Arts Club. Catalogue of an exhibition of carvings in ivory. 1923, pp. 202, 204
  • Trusted, Marjorie, Baroque & Later Ivories, Victoria & Albert Museum, London, 2013, cat. no. 90
Collection
Accession number
A.93-1923

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Record createdJune 24, 2009
Record URL
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