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Embriachi workshop

The Embriachi workshop (Italian: Bottega degli Embriachi) was an important producer of objects in carved ivory and carved bone, set in a framework of inlaid wood, in north Italy from around 1375 to perhaps as late as 1433, apparently moving from Florence to Venice about 1395.[1] They are especially known for what are now called marriage caskets or wedding caskets, hexagonal or oblong caskets about a foot across,[2] with lids that rise up in the centre. Their output of these was probably made for stock rather than individual commissions, and filled a market for gifts for betrothals and weddings.[3] They sold mirrors framed in a similar style,[4] though fewer of these have survived, and religious pieces both small and in a few cases very large.

Casket with couples, traces of polychromy, certosina work and naked winged boys above.
"Wedding casket", with certosina work, and missing parts showing wooden framework, c. 1390–1410

The workshop takes its name from Baldassare Ubriachi or Baldassare Embriachi,[5] variously described as a nobleman, merchant and diplomat, or an "international man of business and politics".[6] He was presumably not a carver himself, but supplied the capital, and no doubt was involved with negotiating the larger sales to courts and nobles north of the Alps; some documentary records of this survive.[7] His two sons eventually carried on the business, also probably never carving anything themselves.

The great majority of works are undocumented and unsigned, and there were almost certainly other workshops working in the style,[8] so the modern tendency among museums and art historians is to attribute them using "Embriachi workshop", "Embriachi-type" or similar terms. They are also very hard to date with any precision on stylistic grounds. Generally, the quality of carving tends to decline in works dated after about 1410.[9] One scholar, Michele Tomasi, argues that the style of painted, rather than carved, elements of altarpieces suggests that production ceased around 1416.[10]

One of the Visconti panels now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art

The workshop developed a form of mass-production, with the various components produced separately for later assembly.[11] The pieces of bone in particular were mostly carved as narrow tall panels containing one or two figures, which were set in rows along a face. A typical size for an individual plaque is about 10.2cm high and 3.5cm wide.[12] Caskets and other objects normally have a framework of wood, and the areas not fitted with bone or ivory carving are decorated with certosina work, small geometrical inlays of various materials in contrasting colours. They are often called "marriage caskets", though their actual original context is hardly ever known.[13]

Marriage caskets, and other smaller pieces

Though the workshop was patronized by the richest and most style-conscious princes, much of its output of smaller objects was aimed at a much wider group of clients in the merchant and tradesman classes.[14] These were generally decorated with secular subjects, often designed with female tastes in mind, as most were probably given as presents to women, especially as part of the donora of gifts to a bride-to-be.[15]

The presentation of a marriage casket came after the conclusion of the legal and financial negotiations for a wedding between affluent families, but before the marriage itself. It was made the occasion of a certain amount of ceremony, as part of a symbolic courtship, carried to the bride's house and presented on the groom's behalf by a small child, and at that point containing symbolic gifts such as a girdle (elaborately decorated belt) representing virginity.[16]

Scenes from medieval romance literature and, less often, classical mythology are seen, and also generalized and rather decorous pairs of couples or lovers, "couples in conversation, in codified stances full of restraint".[17] The lids of secular caskets may feature personifications of the Virtues.[18] There are also religious subjects, some following the formulae of the Parisian ivory workshops that dominated ivory carving, with triptychs for private devotion. These follow the conventional religious iconography of the period.[19]

 
Loose panel with winged boys

The main images are made up of vertical panels, most with one or two standing figures each, arranged in a row. There is often a secondary zone of panels arranged horizontally with distinctive figures, usually naked males with wings, set on a background of large leaves, usually rose leaves. These often run round the lid of caskets, or the frames of mirrors. In some religious works they wear long gowns and can be understood as angels,[20] but in most works they are rather grown-up putti, or winged "victories".[21]

Pieces where the painted colours have not been cleaned away by later dealers suggest that relatively sparing gilding and painting of highlights was typical, but some pieces may never have received additional decoration in colour. Shields commonly feature, but are not carved with heraldry; this may have been intended to be painted after purchase.[22] The lids often have hinges (perhaps not all original) and are decorated on the underside, and there is often a lock.[23] Many caskets, especially the rectangular ones, have or had metal carrying handles at the top.[24]

Production

The name of the workshop's leading carver, Giovanni di Jacopo, is known; he was apparently in charge of day to day management.[25] He also moved to Venice, where he made a will in 1404.[26] The "workshop" probably operated at several locations, with the essentially separate skills of carving the bone plaques, making the wooden framework and certosina elements, and assembling the final casket very likely done at different places.[27]

 
Panel from the Visconti Pavia chests

Most carved panels, even in the largest prestige commissions, are of bone, apparently mostly from horses and cows, with horns and hoofs also used,[28] but some are "ivory", which is mostly from the teeth of the hippopotamus. African elephant ivory had become even more rare and expensive than previously in Europe at this time.[29] Inventories record the possession of bone mirrors by both Giovanni di Bicci de' Medici (d. 1429) and his great-grandson Lorenzo de' Medici (d. 1490), though both could easily have afforded ivory.[30]

Scholarly attempts to identify workshops or artists working in the style have led to proposed groups such as the "Nailed Coffer" and "Story of Susanna" workshops.[31]

The fairly standard size of the bone pieces with figures has allowed many surviving works to be reassembled and improved by later dealers, combining panels from different pieces to fill missing spaces, at the price of making the original iconography often unclear.[32]

Large works

 
Altarpiece in the Certosa di Pavia, before 1409

A small surviving group of relatively large reredos altarpieces and other large pieces are relatively well-documented. The Visconti family, rulers of Milan, commissioned an altarpiece that remains in the Certosa di Pavia,[33] an extravagant monastery the Visconti built to use as their family burial place. Other similar large religious pieces for the courts of France and Burgundy are confidently attributed to the same workshop on stylistic grounds.

Another important work was commissioned by the Certosa as chests for their Visconti benefactors to use for clothes and belongings in their room at the monastery. It no longer has this form; after extensive rearrangements in the 18th and 19th centuries there are now two groups of carved bone panels set in a framework for display, which are now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, donated by John Pierpont Morgan, whose collections also included several Embriachi caskets.[34]

Some parts from other pieces seem to have been used for the current configuration, which may contain parts from as many as five original works. The subjects are secular, stories from various romances, including Il Pecorone (The Golden Eagle) and classical mythology. The current presentation does not seem to respect their original sequence, leading to much modern scholarly debate, and it is estimated that additional parts were added to give a total of five original objects used as sources for the current array. The price for the chests, paid by the monastery to Baldassare Ubriachi, was 1,000 gold florins, an "astronomical sum".[35] Payments for this are documented between 1400 and 1409.[36]

A third large work was commissioned by the French prince Jean, Duke of Berry for the priory at Poissy around 1400; it is now in the Louvre. It is broadly similar to the Pavia altarpiece, with scenes in bone from the lives of Christ, John the Baptist and John the Evangelist, as well as saints and donor portraits of the duke and his second duchess. It measures 276 cm by 236 cm.[37]

Baldassare Ubriachi

 
Casket with couples, and metalwork top

Baldassare Ubriachi was originally a Florentine, though he traced his descent to the Embriaco family of Genoa, who were distinguished military and political leaders in the Crusader Kingdoms from around 1100 to the late 13th century.[38] He was involved in a number of areas of business, including trading jewels, money management and diplomacy for the Visconti of Milan, dukes of Milan, as well as the bone and ivory carving workshop.[39]

Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor made him a count palatine in 1369 for his work buying jewels for the emperor.[40] In 1379 Charles' successor Wenceslaus IV of Bohemia had an Embriachi-type marriage casket containing relics walled-up in the Sigismund Chapel of St. Vitus Cathedral in Prague, where it was recovered in 1918. The themes of the carvings were secular, indeed mildly erotic, but this did not prevent its use as a reliquary, though one not on public view. Martin I of Aragon similarly gave a secular casket to Barcelona Cathedral in 1405 for use as a reliquary.[41]

Baldassare Ubriachi moved to Venice "soon after 1390",[42] where another branch of the family was already settled, having been exiled from Florence in the political upheavals of the late 13th century.[43] The move may have been forced by financial difficulties in Florence; his sons-in-law took legal action to get their dowries paid as promised.[44] He apparently took the workshop with him.[45] He died there in 1406. The family are recorded there until 1431.

Gallery

Notes

  1. ^ Victoria and Albert "The suggested time range of activity for the workshop differs, from the tightest being 1390–1405, to a wider span of 1370s until at least 1416, but certainly no later than 1433"; Barnes say "1385–1409"; Chicago
  2. ^ Fravolo; Chicago; Barnes; for example a hexagonal casket in the Louvre measures 31,5 cm high, and 29.5 cm wide, the sides 14.6 cm across and the plaques 8 cm high.
  3. ^ Chicago
  4. ^ Revell, 192–193
  5. ^ or Baldassare degli Embriachi, Baldassare di Simone Ubriachi, Baldassare di Simone d'Aliotto degli Embriachi
  6. ^ Carns, 591 quoted; Victoria and Albert; Chicago: "a noble Florentine entrepreneur and diplomat".
  7. ^ Carns, 590–591; Becherucci; Victoria and Albert
  8. ^ Miller; Becherucci
  9. ^ Becherucci
  10. ^ Carns, 591.
  11. ^ Revell, 192; Fravolo; Barnes
  12. ^ Victoria and Albert
  13. ^ Chicago
  14. ^ Revell, 192–193; Chicago
  15. ^ Revell, 191–196; Chicago
  16. ^ Fravolo; Revell, 194–195 on girdles
  17. ^ Fravolo
  18. ^ Miller; Chicago
  19. ^ Chicago; Fravolo.
  20. ^ Louvre
  21. ^ They are "putti" to Miller
  22. ^ Revell, 192; Chicago
  23. ^ Fravolo
  24. ^ Fravolo
  25. ^ Fravolo
  26. ^ Clarke, 407 (note)
  27. ^ Fravolo.
  28. ^ Chicago
  29. ^ Guérin, Sarah M. “Ivory Carving in the Gothic Era, Thirteenth–Fifteenth Centuries”, Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2010
  30. ^ Revell, 193
  31. ^ Miller
  32. ^ Miller; Chicago
  33. ^ Tamanti, G. ; Mancinelli, E. ; Tancini, V., "Il Trittico degli Embriachi nella Certosa di Pavia. Tecnologia costruttiva e intervento di restauro", Bolletino dell'Istituto centrale di Restauro, 3, 2001, p. 90-100
  34. ^ Miller
  35. ^ Miller, quoted
  36. ^ Miller; Becherucci
  37. ^ Louvre
  38. ^ "EMBRIACI in "Enciclopedia Italiana"". www.treccani.it (in Italian). Retrieved 13 December 2020.
  39. ^ Becherucci; Clarke, 405
  40. ^ Boehm, Fajt, 190
  41. ^ Boehm, Fajt, 189–190
  42. ^ Clarke, 405
  43. ^ Clarke, 388, 404
  44. ^ Clarke, 405 (and notes)
  45. ^ Becherucci
  46. ^ National Gallery of Slovenia, with account of the Mattabruna story
  47. ^ Metropolitan catalogue entry.

References

  • "Barnes": Barnes Foundation, "Baldassare Embriachi; Unidentified Scene, c. 1390. Bone"
  • Becherucci, Luisa, "EMBRIACI o Embriachi", Enciclopedia Italiana, 1932, Online at Treccani
  • Boehm, Barbara Drake; Fajt, Jiri (eds.), Prague; The Crown of Bohemia, 1347–1437, 2005, Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.), ISBN 9781588391612, online
  • Carns, P. M., Review of Tomasi, M., Monumenti d’avorio: I dossali degli Embriachi e i loro committenti, (Studi 16.), 2013, Speculum, 88(2), 590–592. JSTOR
  • "Chicago": "Casket, date: c. 1390-c. 1410, Embriachi Workshop , Art Institute of Chicago
  • Clarke, Paula, "Identity of the Expatriate", in Connell, William J. (ed.), Society and Individual in Renaissance Florence, 2002, University of California Press, ISBN 9780520232549, google books
  • Fravalo, Fabienne, "Marriage casket", 2022, Fondation Gandur pour l'Art
  • Louvre page on the Poissy Retable (in French)
  • Miller, Scott, online catalogue entry for "Cabinet frontal with panels from two Embriachi caskets, ca. 1400–1409", Metropolitan Museum of Art
  • Revell, Keith D, Culture and Change: Attending to Early Modern Women, 2003, University of Delaware Press, ISBN 9780874138252, google books
  • "Victoria and Albert": "Panel, ca. 1390–1410 (made)"
  • "Visconti": "Cabinet frontal with panels from two Embriachi caskets, ca. 1400–1409", Metropolitan Museum of Art

Further reading

  • Bayer Andrea (ed.), Art and Love in Renaissance Italy. Exhibition catalogue (New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Fort Worth, Kimbell Art Museum, in 2008/09), Metropolitan Museum of Art and Yale University Press, 2008.
  • Tomasi, Michele, La Bottega degli Embriachi, Museo Nazionale del Bargello, Florence, 2001
  • Trexler, Richard, "The Magi Enter Florence; The Ubriachi of Florence and Venice", Studies of Medieval and Renaissance History, The University of British Columbia, I, 1978, p. 127-218, p. 182
  • Paul Williamson and Glyn Davies, Medieval Ivory Carvings, 1200–1550, Vol. 2, London: Victoria & Albert Museum, 2014, pp. 750–861.

embriachi, workshop, italian, bottega, degli, embriachi, important, producer, objects, carved, ivory, carved, bone, framework, inlaid, wood, north, italy, from, around, 1375, perhaps, late, 1433, apparently, moving, from, florence, venice, about, 1395, they, e. The Embriachi workshop Italian Bottega degli Embriachi was an important producer of objects in carved ivory and carved bone set in a framework of inlaid wood in north Italy from around 1375 to perhaps as late as 1433 apparently moving from Florence to Venice about 1395 1 They are especially known for what are now called marriage caskets or wedding caskets hexagonal or oblong caskets about a foot across 2 with lids that rise up in the centre Their output of these was probably made for stock rather than individual commissions and filled a market for gifts for betrothals and weddings 3 They sold mirrors framed in a similar style 4 though fewer of these have survived and religious pieces both small and in a few cases very large Casket with couples traces of polychromy certosina work and naked winged boys above Wedding casket with certosina work and missing parts showing wooden framework c 1390 1410 The workshop takes its name from Baldassare Ubriachi or Baldassare Embriachi 5 variously described as a nobleman merchant and diplomat or an international man of business and politics 6 He was presumably not a carver himself but supplied the capital and no doubt was involved with negotiating the larger sales to courts and nobles north of the Alps some documentary records of this survive 7 His two sons eventually carried on the business also probably never carving anything themselves The great majority of works are undocumented and unsigned and there were almost certainly other workshops working in the style 8 so the modern tendency among museums and art historians is to attribute them using Embriachi workshop Embriachi type or similar terms They are also very hard to date with any precision on stylistic grounds Generally the quality of carving tends to decline in works dated after about 1410 9 One scholar Michele Tomasi argues that the style of painted rather than carved elements of altarpieces suggests that production ceased around 1416 10 One of the Visconti panels now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art The workshop developed a form of mass production with the various components produced separately for later assembly 11 The pieces of bone in particular were mostly carved as narrow tall panels containing one or two figures which were set in rows along a face A typical size for an individual plaque is about 10 2cm high and 3 5cm wide 12 Caskets and other objects normally have a framework of wood and the areas not fitted with bone or ivory carving are decorated with certosina work small geometrical inlays of various materials in contrasting colours They are often called marriage caskets though their actual original context is hardly ever known 13 Contents 1 Marriage caskets and other smaller pieces 2 Production 3 Large works 4 Baldassare Ubriachi 5 Gallery 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further readingMarriage caskets and other smaller pieces EditThough the workshop was patronized by the richest and most style conscious princes much of its output of smaller objects was aimed at a much wider group of clients in the merchant and tradesman classes 14 These were generally decorated with secular subjects often designed with female tastes in mind as most were probably given as presents to women especially as part of the donora of gifts to a bride to be 15 The presentation of a marriage casket came after the conclusion of the legal and financial negotiations for a wedding between affluent families but before the marriage itself It was made the occasion of a certain amount of ceremony as part of a symbolic courtship carried to the bride s house and presented on the groom s behalf by a small child and at that point containing symbolic gifts such as a girdle elaborately decorated belt representing virginity 16 Scenes from medieval romance literature and less often classical mythology are seen and also generalized and rather decorous pairs of couples or lovers couples in conversation in codified stances full of restraint 17 The lids of secular caskets may feature personifications of the Virtues 18 There are also religious subjects some following the formulae of the Parisian ivory workshops that dominated ivory carving with triptychs for private devotion These follow the conventional religious iconography of the period 19 Loose panel with winged boys The main images are made up of vertical panels most with one or two standing figures each arranged in a row There is often a secondary zone of panels arranged horizontally with distinctive figures usually naked males with wings set on a background of large leaves usually rose leaves These often run round the lid of caskets or the frames of mirrors In some religious works they wear long gowns and can be understood as angels 20 but in most works they are rather grown up putti or winged victories 21 Pieces where the painted colours have not been cleaned away by later dealers suggest that relatively sparing gilding and painting of highlights was typical but some pieces may never have received additional decoration in colour Shields commonly feature but are not carved with heraldry this may have been intended to be painted after purchase 22 The lids often have hinges perhaps not all original and are decorated on the underside and there is often a lock 23 Many caskets especially the rectangular ones have or had metal carrying handles at the top 24 Production EditThe name of the workshop s leading carver Giovanni di Jacopo is known he was apparently in charge of day to day management 25 He also moved to Venice where he made a will in 1404 26 The workshop probably operated at several locations with the essentially separate skills of carving the bone plaques making the wooden framework and certosina elements and assembling the final casket very likely done at different places 27 Panel from the Visconti Pavia chests Most carved panels even in the largest prestige commissions are of bone apparently mostly from horses and cows with horns and hoofs also used 28 but some are ivory which is mostly from the teeth of the hippopotamus African elephant ivory had become even more rare and expensive than previously in Europe at this time 29 Inventories record the possession of bone mirrors by both Giovanni di Bicci de Medici d 1429 and his great grandson Lorenzo de Medici d 1490 though both could easily have afforded ivory 30 Scholarly attempts to identify workshops or artists working in the style have led to proposed groups such as the Nailed Coffer and Story of Susanna workshops 31 The fairly standard size of the bone pieces with figures has allowed many surviving works to be reassembled and improved by later dealers combining panels from different pieces to fill missing spaces at the price of making the original iconography often unclear 32 Large works Edit Altarpiece in the Certosa di Pavia before 1409 A small surviving group of relatively large reredos altarpieces and other large pieces are relatively well documented The Visconti family rulers of Milan commissioned an altarpiece that remains in the Certosa di Pavia 33 an extravagant monastery the Visconti built to use as their family burial place Other similar large religious pieces for the courts of France and Burgundy are confidently attributed to the same workshop on stylistic grounds Another important work was commissioned by the Certosa as chests for their Visconti benefactors to use for clothes and belongings in their room at the monastery It no longer has this form after extensive rearrangements in the 18th and 19th centuries there are now two groups of carved bone panels set in a framework for display which are now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York donated by John Pierpont Morgan whose collections also included several Embriachi caskets 34 Some parts from other pieces seem to have been used for the current configuration which may contain parts from as many as five original works The subjects are secular stories from various romances including Il Pecorone The Golden Eagle and classical mythology The current presentation does not seem to respect their original sequence leading to much modern scholarly debate and it is estimated that additional parts were added to give a total of five original objects used as sources for the current array The price for the chests paid by the monastery to Baldassare Ubriachi was 1 000 gold florins an astronomical sum 35 Payments for this are documented between 1400 and 1409 36 A third large work was commissioned by the French prince Jean Duke of Berry for the priory at Poissy around 1400 it is now in the Louvre It is broadly similar to the Pavia altarpiece with scenes in bone from the lives of Christ John the Baptist and John the Evangelist as well as saints and donor portraits of the duke and his second duchess It measures 276 cm by 236 cm 37 Baldassare Ubriachi Edit Casket with couples and metalwork top Baldassare Ubriachi was originally a Florentine though he traced his descent to the Embriaco family of Genoa who were distinguished military and political leaders in the Crusader Kingdoms from around 1100 to the late 13th century 38 He was involved in a number of areas of business including trading jewels money management and diplomacy for the Visconti of Milan dukes of Milan as well as the bone and ivory carving workshop 39 Charles IV Holy Roman Emperor made him a count palatine in 1369 for his work buying jewels for the emperor 40 In 1379 Charles successor Wenceslaus IV of Bohemia had an Embriachi type marriage casket containing relics walled up in the Sigismund Chapel of St Vitus Cathedral in Prague where it was recovered in 1918 The themes of the carvings were secular indeed mildly erotic but this did not prevent its use as a reliquary though one not on public view Martin I of Aragon similarly gave a secular casket to Barcelona Cathedral in 1405 for use as a reliquary 41 Baldassare Ubriachi moved to Venice soon after 1390 42 where another branch of the family was already settled having been exiled from Florence in the political upheavals of the late 13th century 43 The move may have been forced by financial difficulties in Florence his sons in law took legal action to get their dowries paid as promised 44 He apparently took the workshop with him 45 He died there in 1406 The family are recorded there until 1431 Gallery Edit the Poissy retable in the Louvre 276 cm by 236 cm Mirror Small religious triptych in bone early 15th century Boiled leather travelling case for the last Pieta late Elements from the Mattabruna story late 46 Casket with lock surviving gilding and red and green paint Casket lid with winged boys Open box showing hinges late with later elements and probably from another workshop 47 Loose panels including a Nativity sceneNotes Edit Victoria and Albert The suggested time range of activity for the workshop differs from the tightest being 1390 1405 to a wider span of 1370s until at least 1416 but certainly no later than 1433 Barnes say 1385 1409 Chicago Fravolo Chicago Barnes for example a hexagonal casket in the Louvre measures 31 5 cm high and 29 5 cm wide the sides 14 6 cm across and the plaques 8 cm high Chicago Revell 192 193 or Baldassare degli Embriachi Baldassare di Simone Ubriachi Baldassare di Simone d Aliotto degli Embriachi Carns 591 quoted Victoria and Albert Chicago a noble Florentine entrepreneur and diplomat Carns 590 591 Becherucci Victoria and Albert Miller Becherucci Becherucci Carns 591 Revell 192 Fravolo Barnes Victoria and Albert Chicago Revell 192 193 Chicago Revell 191 196 Chicago Fravolo Revell 194 195 on girdles Fravolo Miller Chicago Chicago Fravolo Louvre They are putti to Miller Revell 192 Chicago Fravolo Fravolo Fravolo Clarke 407 note Fravolo Chicago Guerin Sarah M Ivory Carving in the Gothic Era Thirteenth Fifteenth Centuries Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art 2010 Revell 193 Miller Miller Chicago Tamanti G Mancinelli E Tancini V Il Trittico degli Embriachi nella Certosa di Pavia Tecnologia costruttiva e intervento di restauro Bolletino dell Istituto centrale di Restauro 3 2001 p 90 100 Miller Miller quoted Miller Becherucci Louvre EMBRIACI in Enciclopedia Italiana www treccani it in Italian Retrieved 13 December 2020 Becherucci Clarke 405 Boehm Fajt 190 Boehm Fajt 189 190 Clarke 405 Clarke 388 404 Clarke 405 and notes Becherucci National Gallery of Slovenia with account of the Mattabruna story Metropolitan catalogue entry References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Embriachi workshop Barnes Barnes Foundation Baldassare Embriachi Unidentified Scene c 1390 Bone Becherucci Luisa EMBRIACI o Embriachi Enciclopedia Italiana 1932 Online at Treccani Boehm Barbara Drake Fajt Jiri eds Prague The Crown of Bohemia 1347 1437 2005 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York N Y ISBN 9781588391612 online Carns P M Review of Tomasi M Monumenti d avorio I dossali degli Embriachi e i loro committenti Studi 16 2013 Speculum 88 2 590 592 JSTOR Chicago Casket date c 1390 c 1410 Embriachi Workshop Art Institute of Chicago Clarke Paula Identity of the Expatriate in Connell William J ed Society and Individual in Renaissance Florence 2002 University of California Press ISBN 9780520232549 google books Fravalo Fabienne Marriage casket 2022 Fondation Gandur pour l Art Louvre page on the Poissy Retable in French Miller Scott online catalogue entry for Cabinet frontal with panels from two Embriachi caskets ca 1400 1409 Metropolitan Museum of Art Revell Keith D Culture and Change Attending to Early Modern Women 2003 University of Delaware Press ISBN 9780874138252 google books Victoria and Albert Panel ca 1390 1410 made Visconti Cabinet frontal with panels from two Embriachi caskets ca 1400 1409 Metropolitan Museum of ArtFurther reading EditBayer Andrea ed Art and Love in Renaissance Italy Exhibition catalogue New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art and Fort Worth Kimbell Art Museum in 2008 09 Metropolitan Museum of Art and Yale University Press 2008 Tomasi Michele La Bottega degli Embriachi Museo Nazionale del Bargello Florence 2001 Trexler Richard The Magi Enter Florence The Ubriachi of Florence and Venice Studies of Medieval and Renaissance History The University of British Columbia I 1978 p 127 218 p 182 Paul Williamson and Glyn Davies Medieval Ivory Carvings 1200 1550 Vol 2 London Victoria amp Albert Museum 2014 pp 750 861 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Embriachi workshop amp oldid 1136835801, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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