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Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Not currently on display at the V&A
On short term loan out for exhibition

Conrad Peutinger of Augsburg

Gamespiece
ca. 1550 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This wooden medallion was almost certainly used as a games-piece. The depth of the turned wood border would protect the gesso portrait within during use. Games of skill such as chess and draughts with their chivalric and military associations had deep roots in patrician leisure, and Luxury boards and games-pieces became common possesions amongst the elite of Renaissance Europe.

Probably produced in series, sets of such games- pieces comprised of perhaps thirty-two pieces, which have subsequently been split up and in part lost. It is likely that they were made in Augsburg in the mid-sixteenth century, copied from slightly earlier medals by Friedrich Hagenauer and others. Emminent personages such as Charles V or his brother Ferdinand are usually portrayed on this type of games-piece.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleConrad Peutinger of Augsburg (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Turned pearwood stained black, and gesso
Brief description
Gamespiece, pearwood and gesso, Conrad Peutinger of Augsburg, after Hans Schwarz, Germany, ca. 1550
Physical description
Draughtsman of turned pearwood, stained black, with a portrait of Conrad Peutinger of Augsburg in coloured gesso. Obverse, profile bust to the left; around the border is painted the inscription CHVONRAVS PEVTINGER DOCTOR A AUGUSTAE. Reverse, blank with concentric circles.
Dimensions
  • Diameter: 5.35cm
Marks and inscriptions
  • 'CHVONRAVS PEVTINGER DOCTOR A AUGUSTAE'. (Around border on obverse.)
  • 'Spitzer Collection 1893', '2205' & '1310'. (Label; Reverse; 1893)
Credit line
Salting Bequest
Object history
Provenance: Spitzer Collection. Frédéric Spitzer (b. 1815; d. 1890) was born in Vienna, and settled in Paris in 1852. He amassed a large collection of works of art, which were housed in l'hotel de la rue Villejust, known as the Musée Spitzer. The collection was auctioned in Paris in 1893.
Provenance: Salting Bequest. George Salting (b. 1836; d. 1909), an Australian who settled in England, bequeathed a large collection of works decorative art to the Museum in 1909.
Production
Based on Hans Schwarz's (unclothed) portrait of Peutinger.
Subjects depicted
Association
Summary
This wooden medallion was almost certainly used as a games-piece. The depth of the turned wood border would protect the gesso portrait within during use. Games of skill such as chess and draughts with their chivalric and military associations had deep roots in patrician leisure, and Luxury boards and games-pieces became common possesions amongst the elite of Renaissance Europe.

Probably produced in series, sets of such games- pieces comprised of perhaps thirty-two pieces, which have subsequently been split up and in part lost. It is likely that they were made in Augsburg in the mid-sixteenth century, copied from slightly earlier medals by Friedrich Hagenauer and others. Emminent personages such as Charles V or his brother Ferdinand are usually portrayed on this type of games-piece.
Bibliographic references
  • Trusted, Marjorie. German Renaissance Medals. Victoria & Albert Museum, 1990. 128p., ill. ISBN 1851770135.
  • 'Salting Bequest (A. 70 to A. 1029-1910) / Murray Bequest (A. 1030 to A. 1096-1910)'. In: List of Works of Art Acquired by the Victoria and Albert Museum (Department of Architecture and Sculpture). London: Printed under the Authority of his Majesty's Stationery Office, by Eyre and Spottiswoode, Limited, East Harding Street, EC, p. 84
  • Mané, H. 'Review of German Renaissance Medals', in The Medal, no. 18, Spring 1991, p. 108
Collection
Accession number
A.519-1910

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Record createdJanuary 6, 2004
Record URL
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