Box
1500-1600 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
All four sides are decorated with figure compositions, flanked by pilasters; borders of wreaths and bands. There is a knob handle on the lid, decorated with gadroons and surrounded by a wreath. The casket rests on four flattened ball feet.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Wood, covered with gesso, partly gilt. |
Brief description | Italian, 1500-1600, pastiglia decoration |
Physical description | All four sides are decorated with figure compositions, flanked by pilasters; borders of wreaths and bands. There is a knob handle on the lid, decorated with gadroons and surrounded by a wreath. The casket rests on four flattened ball feet. |
Dimensions |
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Gallery label | Small display curated by James Yorke, gallery 126, 1984-1985
The decoration of the lid is in a somewhat fragmentary condition, particularly the harpies and “tear drop” patterns on the pinnacles. On the front is the story of Pyramus and Thisbe, on the back “The Rape of Europa”, on the left side the siting of Rome, possibly, by Romulus and Remus (a fragment of beneath the SPQR tablet could be the bird of good omen), and on the right Brutus’ addressing the Roman people. The base has an acanthus mould. While familiar figures like the Venetian soldier and merchant are evident, there are interesting variants. Judging from what remains of its ruff and finely modelled hind legs, the lion looks more naturalistic than that dog-like creature on other boxes from that workshop. Two satyrs underneath the baldachin are derived from Montagna’s print. They are finely detailed, particularly in their goat-legs. To the right of Europa’s lamenting sisters, a familiar group, a church nestles on a tall, curving rock, such as we find in Venetian landscape details, at the end of the fifteenth century. The figures stand on vegetation, much less spikey than on the boxes from the Workshop of the Cardinal Cles casket. (1984-1985) |
Credit line | Bequeathed by Captain Henry Boyles Murray. |
Object history | Bequest by the late Captain Henry Boyles-Murray. PASTIGLIA BOXES Gilt pastiglia boxes were mostly made in Venice and Ferrara from about 1480 until 1550. Pastiglia or pasta is the name given to white lead paste, bound with egg white. This was often scented and described in contemporary inventories as pasta di muschio (musk paste). The pastiglia figures and motifs were shaped with a lead mould and then glued to the gilt surface of the box - hence their frequent recurrence on other boxes. The boxes are decorated with legends of Ancient Rome and the scenes copied from woodcuts such as Jacobus Argentoratensis' Triumph of Caesar (Venice, 1504) or illustrations of Livy's Roman History. (Label text, circa 2000, from old Medieval & Renaissance Galleries) |
Historical context | Comparable objects See Pastiglia Boxes, hidden treasures of the Italian Renaissance (Cofanetti in Pastiglia), catalogue from the exhibition Pastiglia Boxes: hidden treasures of the Italian Renaissance from the collection of Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica, Rome: Lowe Art Museum, Miami, Feb. 13 - April 28, 2002, eg cat. VI, VIII, IX, X, XI |
Subject depicted | |
Bibliographic reference | Patrick de Winter: "A little-known creation of Renaissance decorative arts: the white lead pastigilia box", Saggi e Memorie di Storia dell' Arte, 14 (1984), pp. 9 - 131. Cat. no. 62 |
Collection | |
Accession number | W.48-1911 |
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Record created | June 24, 2009 |
Record URL |
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