- Image reference 2006AL5785
- Enlarge image
St Jerome and St Catherine of Alexandria
- Object:
Bead
- Place of origin:
Netherlands (possibly, northern, made)
Lower Rhine (possibly, made) - Date:
ca. 1500 (made)
- Artist/Maker:
Unknown
- Materials and Techniques:
Boxwood
- Museum number:
6921-1860
- Gallery location:
Sculpture, room 111, case 9
Throughout the ages artists and craftsmen have made virtuoso carvings as a display of their skill and ingenuity. Although ivory, wood and stone are relatively easy to carve, other materials such as gemstones are much more demanding. Most of these carvings were made for wealthy patrons and collectors, who delighted in the rarity of the material and quality of the carving. The intricately carved pendant once hung from a rosary. Popular from the 1450s onwards, a rosary was a string of prayer beads used during prayer and contemplation. The beads were dedicated to the 15 Mysteries of the Life of Christ. Elaborate yet microscopic rosary pendants were fashionable between about 1480 and 1520.





