anonymous

Maria Immaculata, with Symbols of her Immaculate Conception

Southern Netherlands, Northern France, Paris, c. 1520

Inscriptions

  • inscription, on the banderole of God the Father, incised:TOTA PVLC[h]RA E[s]AMICA MEA ET MACVLA [non] EST IN TE(‘thou art all fair, my love; there is no spot in thee’, Song of Songs 4:7)
  • inscription, on the banderole beneath the sun above left, incised:ELECTA VT SOL(‘clear as the sun’, Song of Songs 6:10)
  • inscription, on the banderole beneath the moon above left, incised:PVLC[h]RA VT LVN[a]('fair as the moon’, Song of Songs 6:10)
  • inscription, on the banderole beneath the star upper right, incised:STELLA MARIS('star of the sea’, after Jerome)
  • inscription, on the banderole beneath the heavenly gate, incised:PORTA C[o]ELI(‘Heaven’s gate’)
  • inscription, on the banderole beneath the lily between thistles, beneath the star on the right, incised:SICVT [l]I[l]IVM INT[er spinas](‘like a lily among thorns’, Song of Songs 2:2)
  • inscription, on the banderole beneath the rose, left of Mary, incised:PIANTACIO R[osae](‘[like] the planting of roses’, Ecclesiasticus 24:18)
  • inscription, on the banderole beneath the Tower of David, on the right next to Mary, incised:TVR[r]IS DAVID CV[m] P[ro]PVG[naculis](‘[like] the tower of David, built for an armoury’, Song of Songs 4:4)
  • inscription, on the banderole around the olive tree, far right, incised:OLIVA SPECIO[s]A(‘[like] a fair olive tree’, Ecclesiasticus 24:19)
  • inscription, on the banderole around the cedar tree, far left, incised:CEDRVS EXSALTAT [a](‘[I am] exalted like a cedar’, Ecclesiasticus 24:17)
  • inscription, on the banderole beneath the well, bottom far left, incised:PVTEV[s] AQVAR[ium] VIVENT[ium]('a well of living waters’, Song of Songs 4:15)
  • inscription, on the banderole around the two blossoming shoots, left of Mary’s legs, incised:[vi]RGA IESSE FLORVIT(‘a twig [from the tree of] Jesse blossoms’, verse from the Commune festorum Beatae Mariae)
  • inscription, on the banderole beneath the convex mirror, right of Mary’s legs, incised:SPEC[ulum] SINE MACVLA(‘a spotless mirror’, Wisdom 7:26)
  • inscription, on the banderole beneath the fountain, far right, incised:FONS [h]ORTO[rum](‘a fountain of gardens’, Song of Songs 4:15)
  • inscription, on the banderole beneath the enclosed garden, bottom centre, incised:[h]ORTVS CONCLVSV[s]('an enclosed garden’, Song of Songs 4:12)
  • inscription, on the banderole beneath the city, bottom far right, incised
  • inscription, on the reverse, incised:barthelemy PRINET 1758

Technical notes

Carved in relief.


Condition

Drill perforations along the top.


Provenance

…; sale Cologne (Lempertz), 17 May 2008, no. 1188, €4,600, to the museum, with the support of the Frits en Phine/Verhaaff Fonds/Rijksmuseum Fonds

ObjectNumber: BK-2008-69

Credit line: Purchased with the support of the Frits en Phine Verhaaff Fonds/Rijksmuseum Fonds


Entry

The central figure of this relief is the Virgin Mary, suspended in the air amidst various symbols of her Immaculate Conception as she receives her crown from God the Father. Mary’s symbols are visually connected via twisting banderoles that bear calligraphic Latin inscriptions highlighting every aspect of Christ’s conception in minuscule letters. The entire scene is set within a recessed, crosshatched panel framed by a thin cable-motif border.

This integral representation of Maria Immaculata is a relatively late addition to the repertoire of Christian iconography. Only with Pope Sixtus IV’s approbation of the dogma of Mary’s immaculation in 1476 and 1483 – thus ending the dispute between the ‘maculists’ and the ‘immaculists’, respectively represented by the Dominicans on one hand and the Franciscans and Carmelites on the other – could the devotion of the Virgin’s Immaculate Conception take hold and flourish. 1A.M. Lépicier, L’Immaculée conception dans l’art et l’iconographie, Spa 1956, pp. 27-28. One of the first integral depictions of the Virgin surrounded by symbols of her purity was formulated in a metal cut by Jean d’Ypres (d. 1508) disseminated in various books of hours printed in Paris shortly after 1500. Known versions appear in books of hours printed by Antoine Verard (1503), Gilles Hardouyn, Thielman Kerver (1503, 1505) and Simon Vostre (1502, 1508, 1510). The same representation also served as the frontispiece in Josse Clichtove’s De Puritate Conceptionis (Paris 1513).2A.M. Lépicier, L’Immaculée conception dans l’art et l’iconographie, Spa 1956, pp. 52-54. For an identical composition, probably a Lower-Rhenish Schrotblatt of c. 1500, see W. Molsdorf, Christliche Symbolik der Mittelalterlichen Kunst, Leipzig 1926, pl. 4. See also C. Yvard, ‘Translated Images: From Print to Ivory in the Late Fifteenth and Early Sixteenth Century’, in C. Yvard (ed.), Gothic Ivory Sculpture: Content and Context, London 2017, pp. 57-67, esp. p. 62 and note 47, referring to a series of metal cuts ordered by the Parisian printer Thielman Kerver from Jean d’Ypres between 1497 and 1506, and which first appeared in a book of hours printed on 1 December 1502 for Gillet Remacle, see Paris, Bibliothe`que nationale de France, Re´serve des livres rares, Ve´lins 1504, fol. K6v. For a precursor of this representation, see H. Tenschert and I. Nettekoven (eds.), Horae B.M.V.: 158 Stundenbuchdrücke der Sammlung Bibermu¨hle: 1490-1550, sale cat. Ramsen (Antiquariat Bibermu¨hle Rotthalmu¨nster)/Rotthalmu¨nster (Antiquariat Heribert Tenschert) 2003, pp. 229-31, and no. 35. The image also appears as a miniature in a book of hours printed in Bruges shortly before 1450 and today preserved in the Walters Art Gallery in Baltimore.3Baltimore, Walters Art Gallery, inv. no. W.282, fol. 7r, see L.M.C. Randall, Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts in the Walters Art Gallery, vol. 2, France, 1420-1540, coll. cat. Baltimore 1992, no. 203. Around 1500, this very same book of hours was held in the possession of Jean (‘Jehan’) de Ricaumez, Chevalier and Lord of Rillicourt (d. 28 July 1504), and his son, Christophe de Ricaumez. It was Christophe who added the Immaculata miniature to this book of hours – together with a calendar to be used in Bruges – as part of a devotional quire, perhaps made in Rouen.4C. Yvard, ‘Translated Images: From Print to Ivory in the Late Fifteenth and Early Sixteenth Century’, in C. Yvard (ed.), Gothic Ivory Sculpture: Content and Context, London 2017, pp. 57-67, esp. p. 62. In Antwerp, the painter Adriaen Isenbrant adopted the same representation, albeit with several variations, for a large painted altarpiece, thus affirming the rapid dissemination of this new iconography to the north.5M.J. Friedländer (with comments and notes by H. Pauwels et al.), Early Netherlandish Painting, vol. 11, The Antwerp Mannerists Adriaen Ysenbrant, Leiden/Brussels 1974, p. 82 (no. 136), pl. 114.

The ivory-carver followed the graphic examples closely. Inscribed on God the Father’s banderole at the top of the Amsterdam ivory we find a widely known allusion to the Virgin from the Song of Songs, which serves as the scene’s visual ‘motto’: TOTA PULCHRA E[s]AMICA MEA ET M[a]CVLA [non] EST IN TE (Thou art all fair, my love; there is no spot in thee). The various floating symbols encircling the Virgin are accompanied by short texts, likewise chiefly verses taken from the Song of Songs that would later be assembled in the Litany of Loreto (c. 1576).6A.M. Lépicier, L’Immaculée conception dans l’art et l’iconographie, Spa 1956, p. 52 speaks of the Vierge aux Litanies. The ordering of the symbols and texts in no way appears to specify a sequence to be followed by the user. This is likewise confirmed when comparing the ivory to a rhyming text on a tapestry in Reims Cathedral (c. 1530), where the very same symbols are cited in a sequence that bears no logical correspondence to the representation on the ivory.7A.M. Lépicier, L’Immaculée conception dans l’art et l’iconographie, Spa 1956, p. 59 (note 18). First and foremost, the various elements are ordered according to a cosmological system: sun, moon and stars in the sky at the top, and below this the more earthly elements, including the hortus conclusus and the civitas dei, which are actually situated on the ground. The carver of the ivory was also seeking to achieve a certain symmetry. The puteus aquarium and the fons hortorum have been placed directly across from each other, so too the cedar and olive tree. In doing so, however, he chose to leave out the band of clouds that frames the entire scene in the woodcuts. This was likely due to a lack of sufficient space, though clearly its inclusion would also have affected the image’s overall legibility. A second, less elaborate and somewhat smaller (102 x 73 mm) ivory in New York displays a number of deviations when comparing its inscriptions to those on the Amsterdam piece.8Sale New York (Christie’s), 29 January 1997, no. 1 (currently in a private collection, New York). My thanks to Charles T. Little, The Cloisters New York, for this reference (written communication, 23 July 2012). The holes for hinges along the right edge indicate this piece was eventually mounted in a diptych. The carving is less refined and appears to have interpreted the graphic model erroneously or indeterminately in areas, whereas other details seem to adhere more closely, e.g. in the left and right upper corners. A third example in the former Walter Sneyd collection is substantially larger (178 x 121 mm).9Collection Reverend Walter Sneyd (1809-1888), Keele Hall (Staffordshire); See also J.O. Westwood, ‘Archaeological Notes Made During a Tour in Belgium: Western Germany and France’, The Archaeological Journal 18 (1861), pp. 212-25 (‘An ivory carving of the sixteenth century in the collection of the Rev. Walter Sneyd contains representations of the various symbols almost identical with those in this picture’ [= Adriaen Isenbrant in Brussels. Elkington made a reproduction of this example in ‘fictile ivory’ for the Arundel Society.10See Reproductions of Carved Ivories: A Priced Inventory of the Casts in ‘Fictile Ivory’ in the South Kensington Museum Manufactured by Elkington and Co, Ltd., London 1893?, p. 11 (no. 1855-53); R. Koechlin, Les ivoires gothiques français, 3 vols., Paris 1924, vol. 1, p. 346 (note 1) also cites: une plaque des Litanies de la Vierge de l’ancienne collection Sneyd, qui ne nous est plus connue que par un moulage …. See also the cast preserved in London, Courtauld Institute of Art, Witt and Conway Library, inv. no. 307. My thanks to Ingmar Reesing for this reference (written communication, 6 December 2013). Lastly, the same Immaculata representation is known from four other ivories, possibly carved in the Philippines or Goa, that date from the late sixteenth and seventeenth century.11Sale London (Christie’s), 8 December 1981, no. 60. My thanks to Catherine Yvard for this reference (written communication, 5 July 2013); Sale New York (Sotheby’s), 23 September 1998, no. 113; M. Trusted, Baroque & Later Ivories, coll. cat. London (Victoria and Albert Museum) 2013, no. 347 (a Hispanic-Filipino triptych in the Victoria and Albert Museum). Trusted also cites a highly similar example salvaged from the shipwreck of the Philipino galleon Santa Margarita, which sunk in 1601, thus providing a terminus ante quem for this piece. See also M. Trusted, ‘Survivors of a Shipwreck: Ivories from a Manilla Galleon of 1601’, Hispanic Research Journal 14 (2013), no. 5, pp. 446-62. These display a clear Hispanic/Filipino or even Chinese style, for instance, in the styling of the clouds on which the Virgin stands and the sinuous curving of the panels at the top.

Stylistically, the present relief falls under a group of ivories produced from the late fifteenth to the onset of the sixteenth century and currently described as originating from the Low Countries, northern France or Paris. Randall’s suggestion that this specific group comes from Utrecht appears to be premature and has no archival support.12R.H. Randall, ‘Van Eyck and the St. George Ivories’, Journal of the Walters Art Gallery 39 (1981), pp. 39-48; R.H. Randall, ‘Dutch Ivories of the Fifteenth Century’, Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 45 (1994), pp. 126-39, esp. pp. 127-28. See also R. Koch, ‘An Ivory Diptych from the Waning Middle Ages’, Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University 17 (1958), no. 2, pp. 55-64. While the precise location of this ivory production has not yet been established, the mutual stylistic coherence shared by these works points to a specific centre or region of origin. The earliest works display a high degree of uniformity in style and execution: figures are carved quite primitively, typically with pointed faces and sharp, angular poses, overly long hands and fingers, and long sickle-shaped drapery folds. Other characteristic aspects include the crosshatched backgrounds, the fairly flat carving of the scene and the significant attention devoted to the framing thereof, often consisting of excessively compressed gothic tripartite arches with rayonnant tracery. Some of these works already possess the thin cord-motif framing encountered on the Amsterdam ivory.13R.H. Randall, ‘Dutch Ivories of the Fifteenth Century’, Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 45 (1994), pp. 126-39, esp. p. 129. When considering the relatively large number of surviving ivories carved in this style, one must assume the scale of production was substantial. In terms of variety, however, the selection was rather limited: in addition to profane courtship caskets, chess boards and combs, this included paxes, diptychs and small luxury Marian altarpieces, also destined for the export market.14R.H. Randall, ‘Dutch Ivories of the Fifteenth Century’, Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 45 (1994), pp. 126-39, esp. p. 127. See also R.H. Randall, Masterpieces of Ivory from the Walters Art Gallery, coll. cat. Baltimore 1985, nos. 358-65 and R.H. Randall, The Golden Age of Ivory: Gothic Carvings in North American Collections, New York 1993, nos. 35, 162-169. O. Beigbeder, Les ivoires, Paris 1965, fig. 68.

Succeeding generations of ivory-carvers active in the early sixteenth century that followed this first group adopted a number of the stylistic traits and motifs used by their predecessors. Crosshatching and cable-motif borders are very often found in their work. The images themselves, however, are more ambitious, more varied and more complex than those of the previous generation. The large quantities of surviving ivories from this group show that the level of production is certain to have remained unalterably high, with a major concentration on paxes. Artistically, the most important example of this ‘second generation’ of ivories is a large pax in the Rijksmuseum (BK-2003-6).15F. Scholten, ‘Een Nederlandse ivoren pax uit de Late Middeleeuwen’, Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum 52 (2004), pp. 2-23; I. Reesing, ‘From Ivory to Pipeclay: The Reproduction of Late Medieval Sculpture in the Low Countries’, in E.M. Kavaler, F. Scholten and J. Woodall (eds.), Netherlandish Sculpture of the 16th Century (Netherlands Yearbook for History of Art/Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 67), Leiden/Boston 2017, pp. 256-85. See also R.H. Randall, The Golden Age of Ivory: Gothic Carvings in North American Collections, New York 1993, nos. 172, 173, 175. See also O. Beigbeder, Les ivoires, Paris 1965, fig. 65; Gotische ivoren in het Catharijneconvent, coll. cat. Utrecht 1987, no. 16; Gotische ivoren in het Catharijneconvent, exh. cat. Utrecht 1987, no. 67; F. Scholten and G. de Werd, Een hogere werkelijkheid: Duitse en Franse beeldhouwkunst 1200-1600 uit het Rijksmuseum Amsterdam/Eine höhere Wirklichkeit, Deutsche und Französische Skulptur 1200-1600 aus dem Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, exh. cat. Cleves (Museum Kurhaus Kleve) 2004-06, no. 65 (this ivory, Rijksmuseum, inv. no. BK-NM-680, from the De Lupus collection in Brussels (before 1819), is a more elaborate variant of a pax in Baltimore with Mary, St John and St Catharine (R.H. Randall, ‘Dutch Ivories of the Fifteenth Century’, Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 45 (1994), pp. 126-39, esp. fig. 3). In terms of style, the Immaculata ivory falls seamlessly in line with this group of Netherlandish ivories from the early decades of the sixteenth century. Here too we find, for example, the crosshatched background and the cable-motif border. The striking similarity to a small ivory panel depicting a series of sibyls holding text banderoles leaves no doubt that both ivories were made in the same workshop.16Gotische ivoren in het Catharijneconvent, exh. cat. Utrecht 1987, no. 66; I. Reesing, ‘From Ivory to Pipeclay: The Reproduction of Late Medieval Sculpture in the Low Countries’, in E.M. Kavaler, F. Scholten and J. Woodall (eds.), Netherlandish Sculpture of the 16th Century (Netherlands Yearbook for History of Art/Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 67), Leiden/Boston 2017, pp. 256-85, esp. pp. 277-78 and figs. 21, 23. Moreover, the floating Maria Immaculata is virtually a twin of the Virgin rising up to heaven at the very top of the large pax in the Rijksmuseum (fig. a).17Also noteworthy is the agreement in the carving of the foliage on the cedar tree in the Immaculata ivory and the crowning knot of the large pax. Another notable agreement between these two pieces is that in both cases the depicted scenes are derived from Parisian woodcuts of the same period: the large pax is a precise copy of a woodcut from a printed book of hours published by Antoine Verard in 1500 in Paris,18For this model, see C. Engelen, Virga Jesse, exh. cat. Hasselt (Generale Bank) 1989, no. 178. while the model of the Immaculata ivory can be traced to a woodcut made in the same Parisian printing milieu.

The identity of the ivory’s earliest owners is unknown. Judging by the Latin inscriptions, we can presume they were literate and capable of reading, memorising, and internalising the texts and their meanings. The costly nature of the material itself further indicates owners of considerable wealth, possibly laymen from a city’s social elite or members of a monastic community. The chosen iconographic theme of Mary’s Immaculate Conception, as yet quite rare around the year 1500, suggests this treasure was specifically made for a woman, perhaps a nun or beguine. By the eighteenth century, however, the ivory was in the possession of a man whose name is known thanks to an inscription on the reverse: barthelemy PRINET 1758 (fig. b). With ivories, incised or inscribed annotations conveying the owner are quite rare.19Cf. F. Scholten and G. de Werd, Een hogere werkelijkheid: Duitse en Franse beeldhouwkunst 1200-1600 uit het Rijksmuseum Amsterdam/Eine höhere Wirklichkeit, Deutsche und Französische Skulptur 1200-1600 aus dem Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, exh. cat. Cleves (Museum Kurhaus Kleve) 2004-06, no. 60. In this case, the name Barthelemy Prinet indicates a French provenance. Genealogical research shows a fairly definite geographic range for the family name Prinet in the eighteenth century.20Prior to 1800, concentrations of the name Prinet are found not only in northern France, but to a lesser degree also in the department of Poitou-Charentes (Vienne), see Geneanet Database (consulted 22 July 2009). Most citations are found primarily in northern France, specifically in the present-day departments of Picardy and Champagne-Ardennes, i.e. areas that either bordered or were part of the Southern Netherlands in the late Middle Ages. This implies that, in the year 1758, Barthelemy Prinet and his ivory can be traced to somewhere in northern France. At least four of the other ivories from the same group also bear the names of patrons or previous owners: Jehan Nicolle, Henry Lardenois, and Heer P. from Orthen in Brabant, and Mariën Theere, the name of the rhetorical chamber in Ghent.21O. Beigbeder, Les ivoires, Paris 1965, figs. 65 (pax with the owner’s name Jehan Nicolle), 68 (a pax with the owner’s name Henri Lardenois, suggesting a provenance in the area of the Ardennes). Also of relevance is a pax from this group that bears the gothic inscription Heer p orthen ten bos, thus indicating this object was commissioned by one ‘lord p’ (Peter Henrix or Peter Claess?) from the village of Orthen near Den Bosch, see I. Reesing, ‘From Ivory to Pipeclay: The Reproduction of Late Medieval Sculpture in the Low Countries’, in E.M. Kavaler, F. Scholten and J. Woodall (eds.), Netherlandish Sculpture of the 16th Century (Netherlands Yearbook for History of Art/Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 67), Leiden/Boston 2017, pp. 256-85, esp. pp. 269-72 and figs. 13-15. This suggests a somewhat larger range of distribution and production for these ivories that also includes the Southern Netherlands.

Frits Scholten, 2024


Literature

[F. Scholten], ‘Keuze uit de aanwinsten’, Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum 56 (2008), pp. 475-97, esp. no. 1; F. Scholten, ‘A Late Medieval Ivory of the Immaculate Conception from the Low Countries’, in A. von Hülsen-Esch and D. Taube (eds.), “Luft unter die Flügel...”: Beiträge zur mittelalterlichen Kunst: Festschrift für Hiltrud Westermann-Angerhausen, Hildesheim 2010, pp. 186-92; C. Yvard, ‘Translated Images: From Print to Ivory in the Late Fifteenth and Early Sixteenth Century’, in C. Yvard (ed.), Gothic Ivory Sculpture: Content and Context, London 2017, pp. 57-67, esp. p. 62


Citation

F. Scholten, 2024, 'anonymous, Maria Immaculata, with Symbols of her Immaculate Conception, Southern Netherlands, c. 1520', in F. Scholten and B. van der Mark (eds.), European Sculpture in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.457023

(accessed 23 July 2025 20:25:21).

Figures

  • fig. a Pax with the Death and Assumption of the Virgin (detail of the Virgin at the top). Low Countries, c. 1490-1520. Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum, inv. no. BK-2003-6

  • fig. b Reverse view of the present relief with the inscription: barthelemy PRINET 1758


Footnotes

  • 1A.M. Lépicier, L’Immaculée conception dans l’art et l’iconographie, Spa 1956, pp. 27-28.
  • 2A.M. Lépicier, L’Immaculée conception dans l’art et l’iconographie, Spa 1956, pp. 52-54. For an identical composition, probably a Lower-Rhenish Schrotblatt of c. 1500, see W. Molsdorf, Christliche Symbolik der Mittelalterlichen Kunst, Leipzig 1926, pl. 4. See also C. Yvard, ‘Translated Images: From Print to Ivory in the Late Fifteenth and Early Sixteenth Century’, in C. Yvard (ed.), Gothic Ivory Sculpture: Content and Context, London 2017, pp. 57-67, esp. p. 62 and note 47, referring to a series of metal cuts ordered by the Parisian printer Thielman Kerver from Jean d’Ypres between 1497 and 1506, and which first appeared in a book of hours printed on 1 December 1502 for Gillet Remacle, see Paris, Bibliothe`que nationale de France, Re´serve des livres rares, Ve´lins 1504, fol. K6v. For a precursor of this representation, see H. Tenschert and I. Nettekoven (eds.), Horae B.M.V.: 158 Stundenbuchdrücke der Sammlung Bibermu¨hle: 1490-1550, sale cat. Ramsen (Antiquariat Bibermu¨hle Rotthalmu¨nster)/Rotthalmu¨nster (Antiquariat Heribert Tenschert) 2003, pp. 229-31, and no. 35.
  • 3Baltimore, Walters Art Gallery, inv. no. W.282, fol. 7r, see L.M.C. Randall, Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts in the Walters Art Gallery, vol. 2, France, 1420-1540, coll. cat. Baltimore 1992, no. 203.
  • 4C. Yvard, ‘Translated Images: From Print to Ivory in the Late Fifteenth and Early Sixteenth Century’, in C. Yvard (ed.), Gothic Ivory Sculpture: Content and Context, London 2017, pp. 57-67, esp. p. 62.
  • 5M.J. Friedländer (with comments and notes by H. Pauwels et al.), Early Netherlandish Painting, vol. 11, The Antwerp Mannerists Adriaen Ysenbrant, Leiden/Brussels 1974, p. 82 (no. 136), pl. 114.
  • 6A.M. Lépicier, L’Immaculée conception dans l’art et l’iconographie, Spa 1956, p. 52 speaks of the Vierge aux Litanies.
  • 7A.M. Lépicier, L’Immaculée conception dans l’art et l’iconographie, Spa 1956, p. 59 (note 18).
  • 8Sale New York (Christie’s), 29 January 1997, no. 1 (currently in a private collection, New York). My thanks to Charles T. Little, The Cloisters New York, for this reference (written communication, 23 July 2012). The holes for hinges along the right edge indicate this piece was eventually mounted in a diptych. The carving is less refined and appears to have interpreted the graphic model erroneously or indeterminately in areas, whereas other details seem to adhere more closely, e.g. in the left and right upper corners.
  • 9Collection Reverend Walter Sneyd (1809-1888), Keele Hall (Staffordshire); See also J.O. Westwood, ‘Archaeological Notes Made During a Tour in Belgium: Western Germany and France’, The Archaeological Journal 18 (1861), pp. 212-25 (‘An ivory carving of the sixteenth century in the collection of the Rev. Walter Sneyd contains representations of the various symbols almost identical with those in this picture’ [= Adriaen Isenbrant in Brussels
  • 10See Reproductions of Carved Ivories: A Priced Inventory of the Casts in ‘Fictile Ivory’ in the South Kensington Museum Manufactured by Elkington and Co, Ltd., London 1893?, p. 11 (no. 1855-53); R. Koechlin, Les ivoires gothiques français, 3 vols., Paris 1924, vol. 1, p. 346 (note 1) also cites: une plaque des Litanies de la Vierge de l’ancienne collection Sneyd, qui ne nous est plus connue que par un moulage …. See also the cast preserved in London, Courtauld Institute of Art, Witt and Conway Library, inv. no. 307. My thanks to Ingmar Reesing for this reference (written communication, 6 December 2013).
  • 11Sale London (Christie’s), 8 December 1981, no. 60. My thanks to Catherine Yvard for this reference (written communication, 5 July 2013); Sale New York (Sotheby’s), 23 September 1998, no. 113; M. Trusted, Baroque & Later Ivories, coll. cat. London (Victoria and Albert Museum) 2013, no. 347 (a Hispanic-Filipino triptych in the Victoria and Albert Museum). Trusted also cites a highly similar example salvaged from the shipwreck of the Philipino galleon Santa Margarita, which sunk in 1601, thus providing a terminus ante quem for this piece. See also M. Trusted, ‘Survivors of a Shipwreck: Ivories from a Manilla Galleon of 1601’, Hispanic Research Journal 14 (2013), no. 5, pp. 446-62.
  • 12R.H. Randall, ‘Van Eyck and the St. George Ivories’, Journal of the Walters Art Gallery 39 (1981), pp. 39-48; R.H. Randall, ‘Dutch Ivories of the Fifteenth Century’, Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 45 (1994), pp. 126-39, esp. pp. 127-28. See also R. Koch, ‘An Ivory Diptych from the Waning Middle Ages’, Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University 17 (1958), no. 2, pp. 55-64.
  • 13R.H. Randall, ‘Dutch Ivories of the Fifteenth Century’, Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 45 (1994), pp. 126-39, esp. p. 129.
  • 14R.H. Randall, ‘Dutch Ivories of the Fifteenth Century’, Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 45 (1994), pp. 126-39, esp. p. 127. See also R.H. Randall, Masterpieces of Ivory from the Walters Art Gallery, coll. cat. Baltimore 1985, nos. 358-65 and R.H. Randall, The Golden Age of Ivory: Gothic Carvings in North American Collections, New York 1993, nos. 35, 162-169. O. Beigbeder, Les ivoires, Paris 1965, fig. 68.
  • 15F. Scholten, ‘Een Nederlandse ivoren pax uit de Late Middeleeuwen’, Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum 52 (2004), pp. 2-23; I. Reesing, ‘From Ivory to Pipeclay: The Reproduction of Late Medieval Sculpture in the Low Countries’, in E.M. Kavaler, F. Scholten and J. Woodall (eds.), Netherlandish Sculpture of the 16th Century (Netherlands Yearbook for History of Art/Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 67), Leiden/Boston 2017, pp. 256-85. See also R.H. Randall, The Golden Age of Ivory: Gothic Carvings in North American Collections, New York 1993, nos. 172, 173, 175. See also O. Beigbeder, Les ivoires, Paris 1965, fig. 65; Gotische ivoren in het Catharijneconvent, coll. cat. Utrecht 1987, no. 16; Gotische ivoren in het Catharijneconvent, exh. cat. Utrecht 1987, no. 67; F. Scholten and G. de Werd, Een hogere werkelijkheid: Duitse en Franse beeldhouwkunst 1200-1600 uit het Rijksmuseum Amsterdam/Eine höhere Wirklichkeit, Deutsche und Französische Skulptur 1200-1600 aus dem Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, exh. cat. Cleves (Museum Kurhaus Kleve) 2004-06, no. 65 (this ivory, Rijksmuseum, inv. no. BK-NM-680, from the De Lupus collection in Brussels (before 1819), is a more elaborate variant of a pax in Baltimore with Mary, St John and St Catharine (R.H. Randall, ‘Dutch Ivories of the Fifteenth Century’, Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 45 (1994), pp. 126-39, esp. fig. 3).
  • 16Gotische ivoren in het Catharijneconvent, exh. cat. Utrecht 1987, no. 66; I. Reesing, ‘From Ivory to Pipeclay: The Reproduction of Late Medieval Sculpture in the Low Countries’, in E.M. Kavaler, F. Scholten and J. Woodall (eds.), Netherlandish Sculpture of the 16th Century (Netherlands Yearbook for History of Art/Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 67), Leiden/Boston 2017, pp. 256-85, esp. pp. 277-78 and figs. 21, 23.
  • 17Also noteworthy is the agreement in the carving of the foliage on the cedar tree in the Immaculata ivory and the crowning knot of the large pax.
  • 18For this model, see C. Engelen, Virga Jesse, exh. cat. Hasselt (Generale Bank) 1989, no. 178.
  • 19Cf. F. Scholten and G. de Werd, Een hogere werkelijkheid: Duitse en Franse beeldhouwkunst 1200-1600 uit het Rijksmuseum Amsterdam/Eine höhere Wirklichkeit, Deutsche und Französische Skulptur 1200-1600 aus dem Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, exh. cat. Cleves (Museum Kurhaus Kleve) 2004-06, no. 60.
  • 20Prior to 1800, concentrations of the name Prinet are found not only in northern France, but to a lesser degree also in the department of Poitou-Charentes (Vienne), see Geneanet Database (consulted 22 July 2009).
  • 21O. Beigbeder, Les ivoires, Paris 1965, figs. 65 (pax with the owner’s name Jehan Nicolle), 68 (a pax with the owner’s name Henri Lardenois, suggesting a provenance in the area of the Ardennes). Also of relevance is a pax from this group that bears the gothic inscription Heer p orthen ten bos, thus indicating this object was commissioned by one ‘lord p’ (Peter Henrix or Peter Claess?) from the village of Orthen near Den Bosch, see I. Reesing, ‘From Ivory to Pipeclay: The Reproduction of Late Medieval Sculpture in the Low Countries’, in E.M. Kavaler, F. Scholten and J. Woodall (eds.), Netherlandish Sculpture of the 16th Century (Netherlands Yearbook for History of Art/Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 67), Leiden/Boston 2017, pp. 256-85, esp. pp. 269-72 and figs. 13-15.