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Plaquette

A plaquette (French pronunciation: [plakɛt], small plaque) is a small low relief sculpture in bronze or other materials. These were popular in the Italian Renaissance and later. They may be commemorative, but especially in the Renaissance and Mannerist periods were often made for purely decorative purposes, with often crowded scenes from religious, historical or mythological sources. Only one side is decorated, giving the main point of distinction with the artistic medal, where both sides are normally decorated.[2] Most are rectangular or circular, but other shapes are found, as in the example illustrated. Typical sizes range from about two inches up to about seven across a side, or as the diameter, with the smaller end or middle of that range more common. They "typically fit within the hand", as Grove puts it.[3] At the smaller end they overlap with medals, and at the larger they begin to be called plaques.

Horatius Cocles at the bridge, Renaissance plaquette by Master IO.F.F., late 15th century, Padua, 6.1 x 6.0 cm, in a shape for decorating a sword hilt.[1]
Peter Flötner, Vanitas, 1535–1540, gilt bronze

The form began in the 1440s in Italy, but spread across Europe in the next century, especially to France, Germany and the Low Countries. By about 1550 it had fallen from fashion in Italy, but French plaquettes were entering their best period, and there and in Germany they continued to be popular into the 17th century. The form continued to be made at a low level, with something of a revival from about 1850.[4] They have always been closely related to the medal, and many awards today are in the form of plaquettes, but plaquettes were less restricted in their subject-matter than the medal, and allowed the artist more freedom.

Usage Edit

The purpose and use of decorative plaquettes was evidently varied and remains somewhat unclear; their creation and use is relatively poorly documented. Some were mounted in furniture, boxes or other objects such as lamps, and many examples have holes for hanging on walls, added later. Other copies have three or four holes, for holding in a setting. Religious subjects in a pair or set might be set into the doors of tabernacles, and many were used for paxes, sometimes after being given a frame. Some shapes were designed for particular roles such as decorating sword hilts, though perhaps not all copies made were used in this way. Others were framed for hanging, but many were probably just kept and displayed loose, perhaps propped up on a shelf or desk, or in drawers or boxes. Many images show signs of wear. Devotional images were probably often carried around in a pocket, a habit that became common with crucifixes in Florence after a plague in 1373.[5] A large part of the market was probably other artists and craftsmen looking for models for other forms.[6] Plaquette bindings are leather bookbindings that incorporate plaquette casts in gesso,[7] often of designs that are also found in metal.

 
Moderno, The Continence of Scipio, c 1500–1510, 5.8 x 7.5 cm

Plaquettes were also collected, and in particular 16th-century examples are often crowded with figures, making the scenes hard to read. They are best appreciated when held in the hand near a good light source, and were probably passed round when a collection was shown to fellow connoisseurs. The difficulty of reading the scenes, and an often obscure choice of subjects, suggest that a self-conscious display of classical learning was part of their appeal, for collectors and artists alike. They were one of the types of objects often found in the – normally male – environment of the studiolo and cabinet of curiosities, along with other small forms such as classical coins and engraved gems.[8]

The artists who made them tended to be either sculptors in bronze, also making small figures and objects such as inkwells, or goldsmiths, who often practised in the related field of engraving. They were relatively cheap and transportable, and were soon disseminated widely across Europe, offering an opportunity for artists to display their virtuosity and sophistication, and promote themselves beyond their own city. The same factors, combined with their modern display behind glass, make them relatively little appreciated today. The moulds were also sometimes re-used at considerable distances from their time and place of creation, or new moulds were made from a plaquette.[9] German 17th-century plaquettes were still being used as models for silverware in Regency London.[10]

Plaquettes, like prints, played an important part in the diffusion of styles and trends in iconography, especially for classical subjects. Some drawings for plaquette designs survive; others copied prints, book illustrations and designs in other media, including classical engraved gems and sculpture. In Germany models in wood or limestone might be made. They were often made in sets, illustrating a story, or set of figures.[11]

Materials and technique Edit

 
Allegorical Triumph of Giovanni Andrea Doria, Leone Leoni, 1541–42

As with medals, Renaissance plaquettes were normally made using the lost wax technique of casting, and numbers of copies were presumably normally made, although many now only survive in a unique copy, and perhaps never had others. The quality of individual castings can vary considerably, and the time and locations of individual castings from the same mould my vary considerably. Some designs can be shown to have had different generations of casts made from casts. Most are in bronze, but silver and gold, in solid or plated and gilded forms, are also found, as well as other metals. Often plaquettes with copies in precious metal also exist in bronze copies.[12]

In early 16th-century Nuremberg, which was the main German centre,[13] plaquettes, like other metalwork types of objects, were often made in the relatively plebeian material of brass, even by top artists like the Vischer family and Peter Flötner.[14] Lead was also used, especially in German castings intended as artisan's models rather than for collectors.[15] From the 19th century on cast iron was also used, especially in Germany. In Italy lead was also used for an initial trial cast. The castings were normally not worked much further with tools, beyond polishing and often giving an artificial patina.[16]

History Edit

The word plaquette is a 19th-century invention by the French art historian Eugene Piot. Les Bronzes de la Renaissance. Les Plaquettes by Émile Molinier of 1886 was the first large study, and these two between them defined the form as it is understood today.[17] To Renaissance Italians plaquettes were known, along with other similar types of objects, by a variety of somewhat vague terms such as piastra and medaglietti,[18] rilievi,[19] or modelli.[20]

Italy Edit

 
Self-portrait head by Leon Battista Alberti, c 1435, 20.1 cm high

Plaquettes grew from two rather different Italian origins. In Rome in the 1440s and 1450s they began as a way of reproducing the designs of classical engraved gems, by taking a wax impression of them. The Venetian Pietro Barbo (1417–1471) became a cardinal when his uncle was elected Pope Eugenius IV in 1431. He became an enthusiastic pioneer of this form, maintaining a foundry in his new Palazzo Venezia, and perhaps participating in the casting himself.[21] These plaquettes had the same small size and classical subject matter as the gems they replicated.

Around the same time north Italian artists began making plaquettes, often much larger and with religious subject matter. Padua, already an important centre of metalworking, is seen by many historians as the crucial location.[22] Two significant works, neither typical of later examples, were the self-portrait head by Leon Battista Alberti, oval and 20 cm high,[23] and a slightly larger circular Madonna and Child with putti by Donatello (Victoria and Albert Museum, London). This remained highly unusual in that the reverse is concave and repeats the design. Other larger religious reliefs by Donatello were copied or adapted in a smaller plaquette format by other artists, probably including his own workshop.[24] These grew out of a wider context of small religious images that represented mass-produced versions for the middle classes of the larger and unique religious art made for the rich and for churches.[25] Also in the 1440s Pisanello was establishing the genre of the double-sided portrait medal, followed by Matteo de' Pasti and others. By the later decades of the century medals and plaquettes were being produced in most of the north Italian artistic centres.[26]

Significant later artists included Moderno (as he signed many of his works), who was very likely Galleazzo Mondella, a goldsmith from Verona recorded in Rome around 1500. Some 45 plaquettes are signed by or attributed to him (and hardly any medals), and a number of members of his workshop have been identified by their styles.[27] Andrea Riccio,[28] Giovanni Bernardi,[29] Francesco di Giorgio Martini, Valerio Belli,[30] and Leone Leoni,[31] are among the artists to whom a clear name can be attached. Many significant unidentified masters are given notnames by art historians, such as Moderno and Master IO.F.F., who often signed their works. Belli and Bernardi were the leaders in the luxury form of small intaglios engraved in rock crystal, and several of these were reproduced in plaquette form around 1520–40, some cast from wax impressions taken off the crystals.[32] Riccio was also a sculptor of small bronzes, and his plaquettes tended to have a relatively high relief. He had a large workshop and many followers.[33]

Germany Edit

German production began in Nuremberg, around 1500, but by 1600 Augsburg was the main centre. German examples tended to draw their designs from prints, and were in turn frequently reused in other media, and perhaps more often produced primarily as models for other trades. The repeated reuse of moulds, and their distribution far from their place of making, are especially typical of south German plaquettes. Even fewer of the artists involved are known than in Italy.[34] Production lasted well into the 17th century, when it became involved in the "Dürer revival", with several of his prints being turned into plaquettes.[35]

France and the Netherlands Edit

Further north plaquettes were produced from around 1550, initially under influence more from Germany than Italy. Artists (often Huguenot in France) included Étienne Delaune, who mostly lived in Strasbourg, and François Briot from Lorraine. François Duquesnoy from Brussels worked as a sculptor in Rome from 1618, and influenced Flemish plaquettes.[36]

Later history Edit

 
Ludwig Gies, cast iron, 8 x 9.8 cm, inscribed "1914·VERTRIEBEN·1915" = "Refugees 1914–1915"

The form saw a small revival in the 19th century; examples from this period are typically rather larger than in the Renaissance. Artists such as, in America, Augustus Saint-Gaudens and Emil Fuchs made commemorative portrait plaquettes of figures such as Leo Tolstoy and Mark Twain (both by Saint-Gaudens).[37] Especially in France and Germany, commemorative plaquettes for industry and institutions involved a wide range of contemporary subject matter. A number of artists produced examples purely because they were attracted by the form, or the possibility of reaching a wider market. A number of regular awards by institutions chose the plaquette form, though often retaining "medal" in the name of the award. The circular so-called "death penny" (the Memorial Plaque) minted in the UK after World War I is a large twentieth-century commemorative example.

Collections Edit

 
Low countries, c 1610, Diana and Actaeon, in lead

Many major museums have collections, which are not always given room in the gallery displays. The National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C., despite being essentially a collection of paintings, has what is recognised as the finest single collection, especially of Italian Renaissance work, which includes over 450 plaquettes,[38] and is very well displayed on the ground floor.[39]

The Washington collection of medals, plaquettes and small bronzes includes the leading French collection assembled by Gustave Dreyfus (1837–1914), which was bought by Samuel H. Kress (1863–1955). In 1945 the Kress Foundation added over 1,300 bronzes collected by the British art dealer Lord Duveen, and donated all its collection to the museum in 1957. Joseph E. Widener had already given the museum a significant collection in 1942.[40]

The Wallace Collection in London has a good smaller display, as do the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Cabinet des médailles, Paris, the Hermitage Museum, the Ashmolean in Oxford, and a number of German museums, although the outstanding Berlin collection was lost in World War II.[41] Not much of the British Museum's important collection is on display, nor that of the Vatican Museums.

The Bargello in Florence has some 400 plaquettes, about half from the collection of the Medici family, who played an important role in the development of the form. Most of the rest are from the collection of Louis Carrand, who bequeathed it to Florence. After that of Drefus, this is the next most important collection assembled in Paris in the 19th century and still intact. Paris was then the centre of plaquette collecting.[42]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Wilson, 97
  2. ^ Palmer, 74; Grove, 220
  3. ^ Grove, 222
  4. ^ Grove, 220–223
  5. ^ Palmer, 73
  6. ^ Wilson, p.8 and various entries, Grove, 220–223
  7. ^ Marks, 40
  8. ^ Wilson, p.8, Grove, 220, 222; Syson and Thornton, 78–91 for a wider context
  9. ^ Grove, 220–222
  10. ^ Hayward, 779
  11. ^ Grove, 220, 222
  12. ^ Grove, 220–223
  13. ^ Grove, 222
  14. ^ "Gothic and Renaissance Art in Nuremberg, 1300–1550", pp. 75–76; #s 193, 194, 204, 205, 254–257, 261, 1986, Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.), Germanisches Nationalmuseum Nürnberg, ISBN 0870994662, 9780870994661, google books
  15. ^ Hayward, 779
  16. ^ Palmer, 75
  17. ^ Warren, 833
  18. ^ Grove, 220; Syson and Thornton, 117
  19. ^ Syson and Thornton, 117 ("reliefs")
  20. ^ Palmer, 74
  21. ^ Grove, 220–221
  22. ^ Palmer, 75
  23. ^ Wilson, 12
  24. ^ Palmer, throughout; Wilson, 14; Grove, 221
  25. ^ Palmer, 76–78
  26. ^ Wilson, 14–24
  27. ^ Wilson, 105–110; Grove, 221
  28. ^ Wilson, 76–88
  29. ^ Wilson, 111–113
  30. ^ Wilson, 114–116
  31. ^ Wilson, 127–133
  32. ^ Grove, 221–222; Wilson, 111–116
  33. ^ Grove, 221–222; Wilson,76–88
  34. ^ Hayward, 779–780; Grove 222
  35. ^ Grove, 222
  36. ^ Grove, 222
  37. ^ Gardner, Albert Ten Eyck, American Sculpture: A Catalogue of the Collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, pp. 92–94, 1965, Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.)
  38. ^ Wilson, 6
  39. ^ Grove, 220; Wilson is the handbook for this collection
  40. ^ Wilson, 6
  41. ^ Bober, 593
  42. ^ Warren, 833

References Edit

  • Bober, Phyllis Pray, review of Italian Plaquettes by Alison Luchs, Renaissance Quarterly, Vol. 44, No. 3 (Autumn, 1991), pp. 590–593, The University of Chicago Press on behalf of the Renaissance Society of America, Article DOI: 10.2307/2862612, JSTOR
  • "Grove": "Plaquette" in The Grove Encyclopedia of Decorative Arts, Volume 1, Editor, Gordon Campbell, pp. 220–223, 2006, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0195189485, 9780195189483, Google books
  • Hayward, J.F., review of Deutsche, Niederländische und Französische Plaketten 1500–1650, 2 Vols by Ingrid Weber, The Burlington Magazine, Vol. 118, No. 884 (Nov., 1976), pp. 779–780, JSTOR
  • Marks, P.J.M., Beautiful Bookbindings, A Thousand Years of the Bookbinder's Art, 2011, British Library, ISBN 978-0-7123-5823-1
  • Palmer, Allison Lee, The Walters' "Madonna and Child" Plaquette and Private Devotional Art in Early Renaissance Italy, The Journal of the Walters Art Museum, Vol. 59, Focus on the Collections (2001), pp. 73–84, The Walters Art Museum, JSTOR
  • Syson, Luke and Thornton, Dora, Objects of Virtue: Art in Renaissance Italy, 2001, Getty Trust Publications: J. Paul Getty Museum, ISBN 0892366575, 9780892366576, google books
  • Warren, Jeremy, Review of Placchette, secoli XV-XVIII nel Museo Nazionale del Bargello by Giuseppe Toderi, The Burlington Magazine, Vol. 138, No. 1125 (Dec., 1996), pp. 832–833, JSTOR
  • Wilson, Carolyn C., Renaissance Small Bronze Sculpture and Associated Decorative Arts, 1983, National Gallery of Art (Washington), ISBN 0894680676

Further reading Edit

  • Studies in the History of Art, Vol. 22, Symposium Papers IX: Italian Plaquettes (1989)

External links Edit

  • European sculpture and metalwork, a collection catalogue from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries (fully available online as PDF), which contains material on plaquettes (see index)

plaquette, plaquette, french, pronunciation, plakɛt, small, plaque, small, relief, sculpture, bronze, other, materials, these, were, popular, italian, renaissance, later, they, commemorative, especially, renaissance, mannerist, periods, were, often, made, pure. A plaquette French pronunciation plakɛt small plaque is a small low relief sculpture in bronze or other materials These were popular in the Italian Renaissance and later They may be commemorative but especially in the Renaissance and Mannerist periods were often made for purely decorative purposes with often crowded scenes from religious historical or mythological sources Only one side is decorated giving the main point of distinction with the artistic medal where both sides are normally decorated 2 Most are rectangular or circular but other shapes are found as in the example illustrated Typical sizes range from about two inches up to about seven across a side or as the diameter with the smaller end or middle of that range more common They typically fit within the hand as Grove puts it 3 At the smaller end they overlap with medals and at the larger they begin to be called plaques Horatius Cocles at the bridge Renaissance plaquette by Master IO F F late 15th century Padua 6 1 x 6 0 cm in a shape for decorating a sword hilt 1 Peter Flotner Vanitas 1535 1540 gilt bronzeThe form began in the 1440s in Italy but spread across Europe in the next century especially to France Germany and the Low Countries By about 1550 it had fallen from fashion in Italy but French plaquettes were entering their best period and there and in Germany they continued to be popular into the 17th century The form continued to be made at a low level with something of a revival from about 1850 4 They have always been closely related to the medal and many awards today are in the form of plaquettes but plaquettes were less restricted in their subject matter than the medal and allowed the artist more freedom Contents 1 Usage 2 Materials and technique 3 History 3 1 Italy 3 2 Germany 3 3 France and the Netherlands 3 4 Later history 4 Collections 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksUsage EditThe purpose and use of decorative plaquettes was evidently varied and remains somewhat unclear their creation and use is relatively poorly documented Some were mounted in furniture boxes or other objects such as lamps and many examples have holes for hanging on walls added later Other copies have three or four holes for holding in a setting Religious subjects in a pair or set might be set into the doors of tabernacles and many were used for paxes sometimes after being given a frame Some shapes were designed for particular roles such as decorating sword hilts though perhaps not all copies made were used in this way Others were framed for hanging but many were probably just kept and displayed loose perhaps propped up on a shelf or desk or in drawers or boxes Many images show signs of wear Devotional images were probably often carried around in a pocket a habit that became common with crucifixes in Florence after a plague in 1373 5 A large part of the market was probably other artists and craftsmen looking for models for other forms 6 Plaquette bindings are leather bookbindings that incorporate plaquette casts in gesso 7 often of designs that are also found in metal nbsp Moderno The Continence of Scipio c 1500 1510 5 8 x 7 5 cmPlaquettes were also collected and in particular 16th century examples are often crowded with figures making the scenes hard to read They are best appreciated when held in the hand near a good light source and were probably passed round when a collection was shown to fellow connoisseurs The difficulty of reading the scenes and an often obscure choice of subjects suggest that a self conscious display of classical learning was part of their appeal for collectors and artists alike They were one of the types of objects often found in the normally male environment of the studiolo and cabinet of curiosities along with other small forms such as classical coins and engraved gems 8 The artists who made them tended to be either sculptors in bronze also making small figures and objects such as inkwells or goldsmiths who often practised in the related field of engraving They were relatively cheap and transportable and were soon disseminated widely across Europe offering an opportunity for artists to display their virtuosity and sophistication and promote themselves beyond their own city The same factors combined with their modern display behind glass make them relatively little appreciated today The moulds were also sometimes re used at considerable distances from their time and place of creation or new moulds were made from a plaquette 9 German 17th century plaquettes were still being used as models for silverware in Regency London 10 Plaquettes like prints played an important part in the diffusion of styles and trends in iconography especially for classical subjects Some drawings for plaquette designs survive others copied prints book illustrations and designs in other media including classical engraved gems and sculpture In Germany models in wood or limestone might be made They were often made in sets illustrating a story or set of figures 11 nbsp Pax with plaquette by Valerio Belli nbsp Valerio Belli 1532 Ecce Homo one of a set of four for an inkpot or similar object nbsp Two small plaquettes by Riccio used in a dagger hilt nbsp another viewMaterials and technique Edit nbsp Allegorical Triumph of Giovanni Andrea Doria Leone Leoni 1541 42As with medals Renaissance plaquettes were normally made using the lost wax technique of casting and numbers of copies were presumably normally made although many now only survive in a unique copy and perhaps never had others The quality of individual castings can vary considerably and the time and locations of individual castings from the same mould my vary considerably Some designs can be shown to have had different generations of casts made from casts Most are in bronze but silver and gold in solid or plated and gilded forms are also found as well as other metals Often plaquettes with copies in precious metal also exist in bronze copies 12 In early 16th century Nuremberg which was the main German centre 13 plaquettes like other metalwork types of objects were often made in the relatively plebeian material of brass even by top artists like the Vischer family and Peter Flotner 14 Lead was also used especially in German castings intended as artisan s models rather than for collectors 15 From the 19th century on cast iron was also used especially in Germany In Italy lead was also used for an initial trial cast The castings were normally not worked much further with tools beyond polishing and often giving an artificial patina 16 History EditThe word plaquette is a 19th century invention by the French art historian Eugene Piot Les Bronzes de la Renaissance Les Plaquettes by Emile Molinier of 1886 was the first large study and these two between them defined the form as it is understood today 17 To Renaissance Italians plaquettes were known along with other similar types of objects by a variety of somewhat vague terms such as piastra and medaglietti 18 rilievi 19 or modelli 20 Italy Edit nbsp Self portrait head by Leon Battista Alberti c 1435 20 1 cm highPlaquettes grew from two rather different Italian origins In Rome in the 1440s and 1450s they began as a way of reproducing the designs of classical engraved gems by taking a wax impression of them The Venetian Pietro Barbo 1417 1471 became a cardinal when his uncle was elected Pope Eugenius IV in 1431 He became an enthusiastic pioneer of this form maintaining a foundry in his new Palazzo Venezia and perhaps participating in the casting himself 21 These plaquettes had the same small size and classical subject matter as the gems they replicated Around the same time north Italian artists began making plaquettes often much larger and with religious subject matter Padua already an important centre of metalworking is seen by many historians as the crucial location 22 Two significant works neither typical of later examples were the self portrait head by Leon Battista Alberti oval and 20 cm high 23 and a slightly larger circular Madonna and Child with putti by Donatello Victoria and Albert Museum London This remained highly unusual in that the reverse is concave and repeats the design Other larger religious reliefs by Donatello were copied or adapted in a smaller plaquette format by other artists probably including his own workshop 24 These grew out of a wider context of small religious images that represented mass produced versions for the middle classes of the larger and unique religious art made for the rich and for churches 25 Also in the 1440s Pisanello was establishing the genre of the double sided portrait medal followed by Matteo de Pasti and others By the later decades of the century medals and plaquettes were being produced in most of the north Italian artistic centres 26 Significant later artists included Moderno as he signed many of his works who was very likely Galleazzo Mondella a goldsmith from Verona recorded in Rome around 1500 Some 45 plaquettes are signed by or attributed to him and hardly any medals and a number of members of his workshop have been identified by their styles 27 Andrea Riccio 28 Giovanni Bernardi 29 Francesco di Giorgio Martini Valerio Belli 30 and Leone Leoni 31 are among the artists to whom a clear name can be attached Many significant unidentified masters are given notnames by art historians such as Moderno and Master IO F F who often signed their works Belli and Bernardi were the leaders in the luxury form of small intaglios engraved in rock crystal and several of these were reproduced in plaquette form around 1520 40 some cast from wax impressions taken off the crystals 32 Riccio was also a sculptor of small bronzes and his plaquettes tended to have a relatively high relief He had a large workshop and many followers 33 nbsp Knight attacked by three lions Italian c 1465 nbsp Moderno Battle of Cannae 1503 04 nbsp Valerio Belli Christ Carrying the Cross 1530 50 nbsp Giovanni Cavino Set of 1st 12 Roman emperors Padua c 1550Germany Edit German production began in Nuremberg around 1500 but by 1600 Augsburg was the main centre German examples tended to draw their designs from prints and were in turn frequently reused in other media and perhaps more often produced primarily as models for other trades The repeated reuse of moulds and their distribution far from their place of making are especially typical of south German plaquettes Even fewer of the artists involved are known than in Italy 34 Production lasted well into the 17th century when it became involved in the Durer revival with several of his prints being turned into plaquettes 35 nbsp Master of the Heroic Antique Legends Justice of Trajan 1525 50 nbsp Georg Labenwolf Hunt for hares c 1550 nbsp Workshop of Hans Jamnitzer Judgement of Solomon c 1575 nbsp Caspar Enderlein Europe 1610 11France and the Netherlands Edit Further north plaquettes were produced from around 1550 initially under influence more from Germany than Italy Artists often Huguenot in France included Etienne Delaune who mostly lived in Strasbourg and Francois Briot from Lorraine Francois Duquesnoy from Brussels worked as a sculptor in Rome from 1618 and influenced Flemish plaquettes 36 nbsp Venus Mars and Cupid c 1590 nbsp Maria de Medici 1600 10 nbsp Allegory of Spring and Summer 1600 10 nbsp Low Counties hunting scene 17th centuryLater history Edit nbsp Ludwig Gies cast iron 8 x 9 8 cm inscribed 1914 VERTRIEBEN 1915 Refugees 1914 1915 The form saw a small revival in the 19th century examples from this period are typically rather larger than in the Renaissance Artists such as in America Augustus Saint Gaudens and Emil Fuchs made commemorative portrait plaquettes of figures such as Leo Tolstoy and Mark Twain both by Saint Gaudens 37 Especially in France and Germany commemorative plaquettes for industry and institutions involved a wide range of contemporary subject matter A number of artists produced examples purely because they were attracted by the form or the possibility of reaching a wider market A number of regular awards by institutions chose the plaquette form though often retaining medal in the name of the award The circular so called death penny the Memorial Plaque minted in the UK after World War I is a large twentieth century commemorative example Collections Edit nbsp Low countries c 1610 Diana and Actaeon in leadMany major museums have collections which are not always given room in the gallery displays The National Gallery of Art in Washington D C despite being essentially a collection of paintings has what is recognised as the finest single collection especially of Italian Renaissance work which includes over 450 plaquettes 38 and is very well displayed on the ground floor 39 The Washington collection of medals plaquettes and small bronzes includes the leading French collection assembled by Gustave Dreyfus 1837 1914 which was bought by Samuel H Kress 1863 1955 In 1945 the Kress Foundation added over 1 300 bronzes collected by the British art dealer Lord Duveen and donated all its collection to the museum in 1957 Joseph E Widener had already given the museum a significant collection in 1942 40 The Wallace Collection in London has a good smaller display as do the Victoria and Albert Museum the Cabinet des medailles Paris the Hermitage Museum the Ashmolean in Oxford and a number of German museums although the outstanding Berlin collection was lost in World War II 41 Not much of the British Museum s important collection is on display nor that of the Vatican Museums The Bargello in Florence has some 400 plaquettes about half from the collection of the Medici family who played an important role in the development of the form Most of the rest are from the collection of Louis Carrand who bequeathed it to Florence After that of Drefus this is the next most important collection assembled in Paris in the 19th century and still intact Paris was then the centre of plaquette collecting 42 See also EditRoyal Copenhagen 2010 plaquettes modern ceramic examples Commemorative plaqueNotes Edit Wilson 97 Palmer 74 Grove 220 Grove 222 Grove 220 223 Palmer 73 Wilson p 8 and various entries Grove 220 223 Marks 40 Wilson p 8 Grove 220 222 Syson and Thornton 78 91 for a wider context Grove 220 222 Hayward 779 Grove 220 222 Grove 220 223 Grove 222 Gothic and Renaissance Art in Nuremberg 1300 1550 pp 75 76 s 193 194 204 205 254 257 261 1986 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York N Y Germanisches Nationalmuseum Nurnberg ISBN 0870994662 9780870994661 google books Hayward 779 Palmer 75 Warren 833 Grove 220 Syson and Thornton 117 Syson and Thornton 117 reliefs Palmer 74 Grove 220 221 Palmer 75 Wilson 12 Palmer throughout Wilson 14 Grove 221 Palmer 76 78 Wilson 14 24 Wilson 105 110 Grove 221 Wilson 76 88 Wilson 111 113 Wilson 114 116 Wilson 127 133 Grove 221 222 Wilson 111 116 Grove 221 222 Wilson 76 88 Hayward 779 780 Grove 222 Grove 222 Grove 222 Gardner Albert Ten Eyck American Sculpture A Catalogue of the Collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art pp 92 94 1965 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York N Y Wilson 6 Grove 220 Wilson is the handbook for this collection Wilson 6 Bober 593 Warren 833References EditBober Phyllis Pray review of Italian Plaquettes by Alison Luchs Renaissance Quarterly Vol 44 No 3 Autumn 1991 pp 590 593 The University of Chicago Press on behalf of the Renaissance Society of America Article DOI 10 2307 2862612 JSTOR Grove Plaquette in The Grove Encyclopedia of Decorative Arts Volume 1 Editor Gordon Campbell pp 220 223 2006 Oxford University Press ISBN 0195189485 9780195189483 Google books Hayward J F review of Deutsche Niederlandische und Franzosische Plaketten 1500 1650 2 Vols by Ingrid Weber The Burlington Magazine Vol 118 No 884 Nov 1976 pp 779 780 JSTOR Marks P J M Beautiful Bookbindings A Thousand Years of the Bookbinder s Art 2011 British Library ISBN 978 0 7123 5823 1 Palmer Allison Lee The Walters Madonna and Child Plaquette and Private Devotional Art in Early Renaissance Italy The Journal of the Walters Art Museum Vol 59 Focus on the Collections 2001 pp 73 84 The Walters Art Museum JSTOR Syson Luke and Thornton Dora Objects of Virtue Art in Renaissance Italy 2001 Getty Trust Publications J Paul Getty Museum ISBN 0892366575 9780892366576 google books Warren Jeremy Review of Placchette secoli XV XVIII nel Museo Nazionale del Bargello by Giuseppe Toderi The Burlington Magazine Vol 138 No 1125 Dec 1996 pp 832 833 JSTOR Wilson Carolyn C Renaissance Small Bronze Sculpture and Associated Decorative Arts 1983 National Gallery of Art Washington ISBN 0894680676Further reading EditStudies in the History of Art Vol 22 Symposium Papers IX Italian Plaquettes 1989 External links EditEuropean sculpture and metalwork a collection catalogue from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries fully available online as PDF which contains material on plaquettes see index nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Plaquettes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Plaquette amp oldid 1178830387, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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