Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

A Painted Casket in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London

View through CrossRef
AbstractThis paper seeks to reassess the iconography and the physical condition of a fourteenth-century carved and painted casket in order to review its geographic origins and to consider its function. The intriguing, but under-researched casket (now in the Victoria and Albert Museum) has been discussed mainly in terms of the Tristan iconography of its lid, apparently derived from a German version of the Tristan story. Yet the casket has been generally described as English or French. In order to review these conflicting assumptions, and to exclude the possibility of a nineteenth-century forgery, the casket was reassessed technically, and the well-preserved polychromy was found to be consistent with a fourteenth-century date. Using stylistic and iconographic analyses, a Netherlandish origin of the casket (around 1350–70) is tentatively proposed. Within the context of the controversial discussion ofMinnekästchen, the casket is finally interpreted both as a practical object and as the bearer of a coded language of love.
Title: A Painted Casket in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London
Description:
AbstractThis paper seeks to reassess the iconography and the physical condition of a fourteenth-century carved and painted casket in order to review its geographic origins and to consider its function.
The intriguing, but under-researched casket (now in the Victoria and Albert Museum) has been discussed mainly in terms of the Tristan iconography of its lid, apparently derived from a German version of the Tristan story.
Yet the casket has been generally described as English or French.
In order to review these conflicting assumptions, and to exclude the possibility of a nineteenth-century forgery, the casket was reassessed technically, and the well-preserved polychromy was found to be consistent with a fourteenth-century date.
Using stylistic and iconographic analyses, a Netherlandish origin of the casket (around 1350–70) is tentatively proposed.
Within the context of the controversial discussion ofMinnekästchen, the casket is finally interpreted both as a practical object and as the bearer of a coded language of love.

Related Results

What is Analytic Philosophy
What is Analytic Philosophy
Special Issue: What is Analytic PhilosophyReferencesHaaparantaG. P. Baker and P. M. S. Hacker. Frege: Logical Excavations. Oxford, Blackwell, 1984.M. Dummett. The Interpretation of...
ALBERT-QM: An ALBERT Based Method for Chinese Health Related Question Matching (Preprint)
ALBERT-QM: An ALBERT Based Method for Chinese Health Related Question Matching (Preprint)
BACKGROUND Question answering (QA) system is widely used in web-based health-care applications. Health consumers likely asked similar questions in various n...
Albert Kahn
Albert Kahn
Though he has been marginalized in most mainstream accounts of modern architecture, Albert Kahn (b. 1869–d. 1942) is increasingly considered one of the most important and consequen...
Zeldzame bloemen, 'Fatta tutti del natturel' door Jan Brueghel I
Zeldzame bloemen, 'Fatta tutti del natturel' door Jan Brueghel I
AbstractThe letters Jan Brueghel (1568-1625) wrote to his Italian patron Federico, cardinal Borromeo, between 1605 and 1625, provide some information about his flower paintings. Th...
The digitization of photographic albums at the Victoria and Albert Museum and other London-based cultural institutions
The digitization of photographic albums at the Victoria and Albert Museum and other London-based cultural institutions
This thesis investigates current digitization approaches to photographic albums by surveying the practices at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, England alongside three othe...
The digitization of photographic albums at the Victoria and Albert Museum and other London-based cultural institutions
The digitization of photographic albums at the Victoria and Albert Museum and other London-based cultural institutions
This thesis investigates current digitization approaches to photographic albums by surveying the practices at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, England alongside three othe...
Remarkable lives – Victoria Claire in conversation with Robert Hurst
Remarkable lives – Victoria Claire in conversation with Robert Hurst
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to share Victoria Clare’s story. Design/methodology/approach Victoria wrote a biography of her experiences. Robert then asked a series of ques...

Back to Top