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Female Saint
anonymous, c. 1350 - c. 1400
Female saint. Oak, with remains of original polychromy. Flanders or Northern France, c. 1380.
- Artwork typesculpture
- Object numberBK-1968-20
- Dimensionsheight 36.5 cm x width 13 cm x depth 6 cm
- Physical characteristicsoak with polychromy and traces of gilding
Identification
Title(s)
Female Saint
Object type
Object number
BK-1968-20
Description
Zij staat op een grondje met de rechtervoet opzij en iets hoger dan die van het linkerbeen, waarop zij rust en waardoor de linkerheup schuin naar voren komt. De armen zijn gebogen, het hoofd met peinzende blik hangt wat naar voren en naar rechts. op het krullende haar resten van een kroon; van beide schouders hangt de mantel langs de rug omlaag, loopt over de rechterarm, is vervolgens naar rechts toegeslagen en wordt met de linkerelleboog opgehouden, waardoor het lange kleed bij de borst en onder de knieën vrijkomt.
Part of catalogue
Creation
Creation
- sculptor: anonymous, Southern Netherlands
- sculptor: anonymous, Northern France
Dating
c. 1350 - c. 1400
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Material and technique
Physical description
oak with polychromy and traces of gilding
Dimensions
height 36.5 cm x width 13 cm x depth 6 cm
Acquisition and rights
Acquisition
purchase 1968
Copyright
Provenance
…; from Galerie Ilias Neufert, Munich, DM 26,000, to the museum, 1968
Documentation
Persistent URL
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Questions?
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anonymous
Female Saint
Southern Netherlands, Northern France, c. 1350 - c. 1400
Technical notes
Carved, polychromed and partly gilded. There is a workbench hole in the head and a hole in the underside. There are mortises in the arms where the forearms, carved separately, would have been attached. The flat reverse has been slightly worked.
Scientific examination and reports
- X-ray stereography: J. Lodewijk, Centraal Laboratorium, Amsterdam, 1970
- condition report: A. Lorne, RMA, december 1995
Condition
The figure has suffered woodworm damage, particularly the fold of the cloak below the left elbow and the edge of the cloak where it is draped across the breast. The lower arms and the points of the crown are missing. A later polychrome layer has been almost entirely removed save for a few remnants (date unknown). The other polychromy is largely original and there are remnants of original gilding on the hair and the hem of the cloak. Some metal nails and plugs have been tapped into the figure during an old restoration (date unknown).
Provenance
…; from Galerie Ilias Neufert, Munich, DM 26,000, to the museum, 1968
Object number: BK-1968-20
Entry
Given its modest dimensions and flat back this Female Saint was probably once part of a carved retable altarpiece. From the twelfth to the early fifteenth century the central section of such an altar was usually flanked by figures of saints like this one.1L.F. Jacobs, Early Netherlandish Carved Altarpieces 1380-1550, Cambridge 1998, p. 14, figs. 8, 10-12, 28, 31; P.-Y. Le Pogam with the assistance of C. Vivet-Peclet, Les Premiers Retables (XIIe-début du XVe siècle): Une mise en scène du sacré, exh. cat. Paris (Musée du Louvre) 2009, nos. 57, 84, 89, 91, 96. The identity of the crowned female figure is unclear. The polychromy on the statuette, including the brocade pattern of graceful vines and a double C-scroll in yellowish-brown paint on the bodice of the robe, is partly original.
With her sweet, rather pensive expression, fitted bodice and draped cloak gathered in folds falling to the left and right, the Amsterdam saint was clearly influenced by French examples,2P.-Y. Le Pogam with the assistance of C. Vivet-Peclet, Les premiers retables (XIIe-début du XVe siècle): Une mise en scène du sacré, exh. cat. Paris (Musée du Louvre) 2009, nos. 50, 52. but the wood used (oak) makes it more likely that she comes from the Southern Netherlands or the region bordering on Northern France. As Oellers has observed, a larger (h. 48.2 cm), polychromed oak Female Saint in the former Goldschmidt Collection, Eindhoven, is remarkably similar in almost every respect.3A.C. Oellers et al., In gotischer Gesellschaft. Spätmittelalterliche Skulpturen aus einer niederländischen Privatsammlung, exh. cat. Aachen (Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum) 1998, no. 54, as ‘Southern Netherlands/Northern France, second half of the 14th century’. The way the cloak is draped across the body of the two figures like a short apron was customary in the second half of the fourteenth century. Van Vlierden associated the Amsterdam Female Saint with a slightly larger oak apostle (h. 44.5 cm) in Museum Catharijneconvent in Utrecht, which stands in a mirror-image S-shaped pose, wearing a garment with similar folds.4Utrecht, Museum Catharijneconvent, inv. no. ABM bh594, see M. van Vlierden et al., Hout- en steensculptuur van Museum Catharijneconvent ca. 1200-1600, coll. cat. Utrecht 2004, p. 69, as ‘Southern Netherlands (?), c. 1375-1400’.
Bieke van der Mark, 2024
Literature
J. Leeuwenberg with the assistance of W. Halsema-Kubes, Beeldhouwkunst in het Rijksmuseum, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1973, no. 5, with earlier literature; A.C. Oellers in A.C. Oellers et al., In gotischer Gesellschaft. Spätmittelalterliche Skulpturen aus einer niederländischen Privatsammlung, exh. cat. Aachen (Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum) 1998, p. 124; M. van Vlierden et al., Hout- en steensculptuur van Museum Catharijneconvent ca. 1200-1600, coll. cat. Utrecht 2004, p. 69
Citation
B. van der Mark, 2024, 'anonymous, Female Saint, Southern Netherlands, c. 1350 - c. 1400', in F. Scholten and B. van der Mark (eds.), European Sculpture in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: https://data.rijksmuseum.nl/20035533
(accessed 15 December 2025 10:42:14).Footnotes
- 1L.F. Jacobs, Early Netherlandish Carved Altarpieces 1380-1550, Cambridge 1998, p. 14, figs. 8, 10-12, 28, 31; P.-Y. Le Pogam with the assistance of C. Vivet-Peclet, Les Premiers Retables (XIIe-début du XVe siècle): Une mise en scène du sacré, exh. cat. Paris (Musée du Louvre) 2009, nos. 57, 84, 89, 91, 96.
- 2P.-Y. Le Pogam with the assistance of C. Vivet-Peclet, Les premiers retables (XIIe-début du XVe siècle): Une mise en scène du sacré, exh. cat. Paris (Musée du Louvre) 2009, nos. 50, 52.
- 3A.C. Oellers et al., In gotischer Gesellschaft. Spätmittelalterliche Skulpturen aus einer niederländischen Privatsammlung, exh. cat. Aachen (Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum) 1998, no. 54, as ‘Southern Netherlands/Northern France, second half of the 14th century’.
- 4Utrecht, Museum Catharijneconvent, inv. no. ABM bh594, see M. van Vlierden et al., Hout- en steensculptuur van Museum Catharijneconvent ca. 1200-1600, coll. cat. Utrecht 2004, p. 69, as ‘Southern Netherlands (?), c. 1375-1400’.