Мадонна с младенцем на троне

ca. 1300
Not on view
Скульптура, представляющая высшую точку мастерства английских резчиков по слоновой кости, по своей значимости соперничает с Крестом XII века из коллекции Клойстерс, представленным выше. Эта фигура маленького размера, относящаяся по стилю к храмовой скульптуре, является примером интимного типа изображений, появившихся в рамках эпохи, кода культ Девы Марии был в зените. Париж являлся признанным центром резьбы по слоновой кости, и только несколько работ можно приписать английским мастерам. Масло грецкого ореха, возможно, использовалось для затемнения поверхности, как рекомендуется в трактате XII века «О разных искусствах», либо цвет слоновой кости создавался под воздействием высоких температур. Сохранилась только часть фигуры Иисуса, у левого колена матери.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Название: Мадонна с младенцем на троне
  • Дата: около 1300 г.
  • География: возможно, Лондон
  • Культура: Англия
  • Материал: Слоновая кость
  • Размер: 27,3 x 13,5 x 9,6 см
  • Благодарность: Коллекция музея Клойстерс, 1979
  • Номер объекта: 1979.402
  • Curatorial Department: Medieval Art and The Cloisters

Audio

Доступно только в: English
Cover Image for 51. Enthroned Virgin and Child

51. Enthroned Virgin and Child

Gallery 14

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NARRATOR #2 (JANNIE WOLF): This superb ivory statuette of the Virgin and Child was most likely produced in England. It might even have been commissioned by the court of King Edward the First at Westminster. The piece has suffered significant losses, including the Virgin's arms, her throne, and all of the Child, except for vestigial feet. Even so, it retains an elegance and a sense of monumentality despite its actual size. The hole in the Virgin's chest would once have contained an inset jewel or crystal-covered relic, and the statuette would have been enclosed within an ivory or perhaps silver tabernacle. The rich reddish-brown patina may be the result of staining with walnut oil or some other agent. Peter Barnet, Curator in charge of the Department of Medieval Art and the Cloisters. PETER BARNET: This is probably due to either exposure to heat or perhaps even exposure to fire; it’s also possible that an oil such as walnut oil was at one point rubbed into the surface of the ivory to give it a kind of luster or color, in fact even in medieval craftsman’s treatises there is the recommendation that this be done, and it’s possible that that accounts for the color of the ivory we see here although this brown color is quite unusual for medieval ivories.

NARRATOR #2: This Virgin and Child was made for personal devotion, and was intended to give its owners a feeling of personal connection with the Virgin. It was also intended to emphasize the reciprocal tenderness between the Virgin and Child. Look closely at the way the Virgin turns to face the Child climbing over her knee.

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