St Anne teaching the Virgin to read
Statuette
ca. 1700 (made)
ca. 1700 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This statuette in ivory depicts 'St Anne teaching the Virgin to read', seated in a wide chair with her right arm round the Virgin, who stands at her side, pointing to a book St Anne has on her lap and in her left hand. The group, very likely to be Indo-Portuguese (Goa) and made in about 1700, is an inferior version of a commonly known composition. There are comparable ivories and versions in the British Museum, in the Vatican Museum, the Franz Mayer Museum in Mexico City and there are wood groups in Brazil. They might depend from an Indo-Portuguese source. Clearly the composition was widely disseminated, perhaps through an engraved source. Goa was the second base in India to be established by the Portuguese, having been conquered by Alfonso de Albuquerque (about 1453-1515) during the reign of Manuel I of Portugal initially in 1510, and then reconquered in 1512. Portugal was interested first and foremost in trade, and the discovery of India was motivated by a desire to dominate trade-routes. But the Christian settlers and missionaries were also keen to convert the native populace to Christianity, and religious images in ivory were commissioned to assist in this. Some were exported to Europe, but others evidently remained and were used for evangelical purposes.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | St Anne teaching the Virgin to read (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | Ivory |
Brief description | Figure group, ivory, 'St Anne teaching the Virgin to read', Indo-Portuguese (Goa), ca. 1700 |
Physical description | This ivory statuette represents St Anne seated in a wide chair with her right arms around the Virgin, who stands at her right side holding the book with one hand and pointing to the pages with the other hand. |
Dimensions |
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Credit line | Bequeathed by Mrs Gilbertson in memory of her husband Canon Gilbertson in 1940 |
Object history | The group is an inferior version of a commonly known composition. There are comparable ivories and versions in the British Museum, in the Vatican Museum, the Franz Mayer Museum in Mexico City, wood groups in Brazil. They might depend from an Indo-Portuguese source. Clearly the composition was widely disseminated, perhaps through an engraved source. The previous owner of the present piece, Canon Gilberston, had been a chaplain in the Royal Navy, stationed on different ships from 1909 to 1923, and may well have acquired the ivory abroad. |
Subjects depicted | |
Summary | This statuette in ivory depicts 'St Anne teaching the Virgin to read', seated in a wide chair with her right arm round the Virgin, who stands at her side, pointing to a book St Anne has on her lap and in her left hand. The group, very likely to be Indo-Portuguese (Goa) and made in about 1700, is an inferior version of a commonly known composition. There are comparable ivories and versions in the British Museum, in the Vatican Museum, the Franz Mayer Museum in Mexico City and there are wood groups in Brazil. They might depend from an Indo-Portuguese source. Clearly the composition was widely disseminated, perhaps through an engraved source. Goa was the second base in India to be established by the Portuguese, having been conquered by Alfonso de Albuquerque (about 1453-1515) during the reign of Manuel I of Portugal initially in 1510, and then reconquered in 1512. Portugal was interested first and foremost in trade, and the discovery of India was motivated by a desire to dominate trade-routes. But the Christian settlers and missionaries were also keen to convert the native populace to Christianity, and religious images in ivory were commissioned to assist in this. Some were exported to Europe, but others evidently remained and were used for evangelical purposes. |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | A.34-1940 |
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Record created | June 24, 2009 |
Record URL |
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