- 130
A Rare Charles I Carved Beechwood Box in the Form of a Book, Circa 1630
Description
- 5 3/4 in. by 3 1/4 in.
- 14.6 cm; 8.3 cm
Catalogue Note
This rare box, which was possibly made to contain tobacco, is engraved on the one side with portraits of a King and Queen who, from their dress, are almost certainly James I and his Queen, Anne of Denmark. The other side with the scene of two women washing a black child beneath the inscription Ye Labour in Vaine is recorded on other objects of the same period, and represents a form of humor which today would not be acceptable. The mermaid gazing at her image in a mirror is a common theme found in the 17th century being commonly found in needlework pictures of the period. Originally the engraved decoration of this box would have been richly accentuated by colored waxes as indicated by the small traces or this red pigment remaining on the King’s costume.
See:
Yvonne Hackenbroch, English and Other Needlework Tapestries and Textiles in the Untermyer Collection, 1960, pl. 44, fig.69, for an almost identical mermaid represented in needlework, third quarter of the 17th century.