0 favorites     0 comments    219 visits

See also...


Keywords

art
MMA
Cloisters
Met
NewYorkCity
2017
Manhattan
NewYork
NY
NYC
medieval
museum
MetropolitanMuseum
glass
German
Gothic
NikonCoolPixB500


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

219 visits


Paten with Abraham and Melchizidek in the Cloisters, October 2017

Paten with Abraham and Melchizidek in the Cloisters, October 2017
Dish with Abraham and Melchizedek

Artist:Hans of Landshut (German, Landshut, active late 15th century)

Date:1498

Culture:South German

Medium:Free-blown glass with paint and metallic foils

Dimensions:Overall: 14 1/2 x 1 5/8 in. (36.9 x 4.2 cm)

Classification:Glass-Miscellany

Credit Line:The Cloisters Collection, 2008

Accession Number:2008.278

At the center of this complex scene, the patriarch Abraham, fresh from victorious battle, meets the king and high priest Melchizedek, who at once gives him bread and wine, blesses him, and takes a tenth of Abraham’s loot. Because Melchizedek is dressed as a bishop and his offering takes the form of a Christian chalice and paten, the plate for the bread consecrated at the Mass, the scene was interpreted as an exemplum of sacrifice and redemption, foreshadowing Jesus’ death on the cross for the salvation of mankind. This suggests that the glass dish served as a paten. At the top of each lantern flanking the openwork frame is a lion holding a staff with a pennant and supporting a shield; the one on the left bears the arms of the city of Freising, and the one on the right those of its Bishopric. However, it is Landshut, a town in southern Germany, that is represented in the background. A document in the archives of Freising cathedral states that a glass dish was painted by a Hans of Landshut. The S-shaped banderole at the base of the left column is inscribed "1[4]" and its counterpart on the right "9 8," indicating the date of 1498. The complex application of pigments, colored glazes, and metallic foils to the outside of the glass vessel—in the reverse order of panel painting—is unprecedented at this early date.

Text from: www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/478211

Comments

Sign-in to write a comment.