Soul at Death
Wax Relief
1620-1630 (made)
1620-1630 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This small framed wax is one of a set of four showing souls in different states (see also A.20 to 22-1982). These highly realistic and dramatic wax tableaux served as ‘memento mori’, intended to inspire thoughts on mortality. Wax modelling had already acquired a certain status by the sixteenth century, as it is ideal for producing the type of intricate workmanship on a small scale which can be seen in this object, and enhanced by the use of colour and texture to mimic flesh. The inscription on the back of the frame, ' Mors malis vita bonis' is Latin for 'Death to the bad, life to the good' and is from the text of the Lauda Sion, which is a sequence sung during the Corpus Christi mass, written by the thirteenth-century theologian, Thomas Aquinas.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Soul at Death (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | Relief, coloured wax on painted glass in deep stained and gilt box frame. |
Brief description | Relief, coloured wax, Soul at Death, possibly by Giovanni Bernardino Azzolino, Italian, probably 1620s |
Physical description | A naked male corpse lying in a coffin, the head resting on pillows and a sheet with a black coverlet pulled up to the chest. The background is black glass, decorated with white wax swags to resemble the lining of a coffin. A gilt crucifix is placed at the corpse's shoulder. A modelled clock standing at midnight and two lit candles painted onto the background decorate the coffin above the pillows. The scene is mounted in a deep stained and gilded box frame and is inscribed on the back. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions | 'Mors Malis Vita Bonis' Note on back of frame |
Gallery label |
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Credit line | Given by the Trustees of the Wellcome Trust |
Object history | This wax is one of a set of four which have previously been described as having been produced by the workshop of Giulio Gaetano Zumbo, following John Pope-Hennessy's attribution of other related waxes already in the collection at the time of their acquisition (A.65 & 66-1938; Pope-Hennessy 1964, op.cit.). However, more recently historian Gabriele Finaldi (1994, op. cit.) has attributed similar waxes, formerly on the New York art market, to the painter and sculptor Giovan Bernardino Azzolino (c.1572-1645), known to have been a wax-modeller, which also represent souls in Paradise, Purgatory and Hell, which suggests that these may also be by the same artist. Purchased from Ferrando, Rome, April 1931 by the Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine. Given by the Wellcome Institute in 1982, together with A.20 / 21 / 22-1982. |
Subjects depicted | |
Summary | This small framed wax is one of a set of four showing souls in different states (see also A.20 to 22-1982). These highly realistic and dramatic wax tableaux served as ‘memento mori’, intended to inspire thoughts on mortality. Wax modelling had already acquired a certain status by the sixteenth century, as it is ideal for producing the type of intricate workmanship on a small scale which can be seen in this object, and enhanced by the use of colour and texture to mimic flesh. The inscription on the back of the frame, ' Mors malis vita bonis' is Latin for 'Death to the bad, life to the good' and is from the text of the Lauda Sion, which is a sequence sung during the Corpus Christi mass, written by the thirteenth-century theologian, Thomas Aquinas. |
Associated objects | |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | A.19-1982 |
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Record created | June 24, 2009 |
Record URL |
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