Master Sculpture from Four Millennia
Master Sculpture from Four Millennia
Important Medieval Works of Art From the Collection of the Late Ernst Boehlen
Censer in the form of a temple
Vente aux enchères clôturée
July 3, 02:32 PM GMT
Estimation
5,000 - 7,000 GBP
Description du lot
Description
Important Medieval Works of Art From the Collection of the Late Ernst Boehlen
Northern Italian, circa 1200
Censer in the form of a temple
bronze
body: 16.5cm., 6½in.
overall suspended: 60cm., 23 5/8 in.
with a label to the underside inscribed: JULIUS BÖHLER MÜNCHEN / B 2005 001219
Professor Dr H.O. Goldschmidt (1920-2009), Eindhoven;
With Blumka Gallery, New York, 2006;
From whom acquired by Dr Ernst Boehlen, Bern
Collecting Treasures of the Past V, cat. Blumka Gallery, Julius Böhler, New York, 2006, no. 33
This Romanesque bronze censer is a fine example of the architectural, as opposed to the spherical, type. It takes the shape of a small temple, which recalls Heavenly Jerusalem. The craftsman and writer Theophilus Presbyter’s (1070-1125) Schedula diversarum atrium prescribes that the ideal form for a censer is the Heavenly City itself, and explains the preferred use of an architectural form and detail for these objects. A near-identical censer, which was excavated near Genoa and dated to the 12th or early 13th century, is in the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston (inv. no. 67.292). Another similar example is the famed 12th-century Gozbert censer in the Cathedral Treasury in Trier, which is more elaborate in its design and probably slightly earlier in date.
RELATED LITERATURE
N. Netzer, Catalogue of medieval objects. Metalwork, cat. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 1991, pp. 80-81, no. 15; B. Drake Boehm and M. Holcomb (eds.), Jerusalem, 1000-1400: Every People Under Heaven, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 2016, p. 273-274, fig. 98
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