Object data
oak with traces of a white chalk ground
height 57.5 cm × width 21.5 cm × depth 11 cm
Master of the Madonna of La Gleize (possibly)
Liège, c. 1360
oak with traces of a white chalk ground
height 57.5 cm × width 21.5 cm × depth 11 cm
Carved and originally polychromed. On the reverse, a horizontal, tapering groove can be seen that was used to conjoin this group to the separately carved Virgin (today preserved in the Victoria and Albert Museum) with a slat.
The lower part of Christ’s right arm is missing. A replacement was added in the 19th century and again removed during the most recent restoration in 1978. At this time, a 19th-century filler was also removed from the cavity in the chest, originally inlaid with a glass or rock crystal cabochon. The corners have broken off on both sides of the bench, as have the train of the cloak at the level of the left arm and the fleurons of the crown. The original polychromy is missing; traces of a white chalk ground can be discerned on every surface of the image.
…; collection G. Francotte, Liège, in or before 1905;1 …; sale, Dutch private collection, Dordrecht (Mak), 13-16 June 1978, no. 1518, fl. 5,648 (incl. the commission of the mediating dealer C.J.J. Weegenaar, The Hague), to the museum
Object number: BK-1978-40
Copyright: Public domain
Master of the Madonna of La Gleize (active in ? Liège, first half 14th century)
This anonymous master has been named after his masterwork, a Madonna in the Eglise Notre-Dame de l’Assomption in La Gleize, a small village southeast of Liège. Preserved in the same church is a second work by the master, a Christ on the Cross. Very little is known about the Master of the Madonna of La Gleize. Judging by the dating and provenance of his works, however, he was presumably active in the first half of the fourteenth century in Liège or its vicinity.
In 1977, Didier attributed several other works to the Master of the Madonna of La Gleize on the basis of stylistic similarities: a group of Sts Peter and Paul in Münster,2 two female saints and a St John the Baptist in London,3 which he all believed to come from the same altarpiece. A Christ and a Virgin once forming a group representing the Coronation of the Virgin are today respectively preserved in the Rijksmuseum and the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.4
As other examples from the area of Liège display influences of the master’s style, one can reasonably assume the Master of the Madonna of La Gleize had a workshop with a sizeable production. Attributed to the same master is a St Hubert from a church in Lavoir (Eglise Saint-Hubert), a small village southwest of Liège, thus providing some insight into the master’s range of distribution.
Marie Mundigler, 2024
References
R. Didier, ‘Skulpturen des Maasgebiets aus den Jahren 1330-1360. Vom Meister der Maria von La Gleize bis zu Gilles von Lüttich’, Westfalen 55 (1977), pp. 8-29; P. Pieper, ‘Zwei Apostelfiguren des 14. Jahrhunderts (aus Lüttich?)’, Pantheon 30 (1972), pp. 283-91; P. Williamson, Northern Gothic Sculpture 1200-1450, coll. cat. London (Victoria and Albert Museum) 1988, pp. 99-103
This Christ originally belonged to a Coronation of the Virgin, a sculptural group once forming the middle section of an altarpiece. When exhibited at the 1905 World Exhibition in Liège, the group was still complete.5 The present figure is nevertheless certain to have been separated from the group long before 1929, the year in which the sculpture the Virgin (fig. a) was given to the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. Previous to this time, the latter work had entered the collection of F. Leverton Harris in London via the British art dealer Durlacher.6 The polychromy and gilding on the Christ figure were likely removed after this separation, as much of the Virgin’s original polychromy remains intact, along with inset glass cabochons.
That the two figures once belonged to the same group is evident not only in their shared provenance as part of the Francotte collection in Liège, but also in the marked formal and stylistic similarities and the approximately equivalent dimensions (respectively 57.5 and 57.0 cm). Both possess identical hexagonal plinths and are seated on identical benches. Most telling is the horizontal, tapering groove on the reverse of both pieces, used to conjoin the two figures by means of a slat. Carved in the breast of both figures is a concave hemisphere large enough to accommodate a sizeable glass or rock crystal roundel, perhaps once covering a relic. Shared stylistic characteristics include the treatment of the hair, the angular drapery folds (e.g. the diagonally descending mantle covering the knees of both figures), the sharply defined limbs perceptible beneath the clothing and the pointed shoes emerging from under the folds.
On stylistic grounds, the two figures can be linked to a Peter and Paul in Münster,7 as well as to two female saints and a John the Baptist in London.8 In 1972, Pieper was the first to observe a relation between these works, though at this time he was as yet unaware of the Amsterdam Christ.9 In his estimation, all of these pieces once belonged to the very same retable, a so-called ‘apostle altar’, featuring a central scene of the Coronation of the Virgin flanked on either side by six apostles and an additional twelve saints appearing below. Each of the figures was displayed in its own compartment. The presence of hemispherical cavities in the chests of the surviving works suggests the retable might have been a reliquary altarpiece, with each image containing relics. One concrete example, produced in Cologne and comparable to this hypothetical altarpiece, is a triptych in the Cistercian monastery Marienstatt.10 Williamson, however, is somewhat less convinced of the shared origin of these works and the notion that they once belonged to the one and the same altar. A key argument is his factual observation that many such multi-figured altarpieces are certain to have been produced in the region of the Meuse River and the Lower Rhine area around the mid-fourteenth century.11 If Pieper’s surmise is true, however, then the altarpiece is certain to have been dispersed prior to 1869, the year in which the Victoria and Albert Museum acquired the two female saints and the John the Baptist.12
In 1977, Didier attributed the entire group, including the Amsterdam Christ, to an anonymous master assigned the Notname ‘Master of the Madonna von La Gleize’. Didier believed the same master was responsible for the grieving Mary and crucified Christ in the Église Nôtre-Dame de l’Assomption in La Gleize, a town located southeast of Liège, and a Hubert in the Église Saint-Hubert in Lavoir, a city to the southwest of Liège, displaying a stylistic affinity.13 His conclusion is based on elements such as the drapery folds that cling tightly to the body and similarities to be observed in the physiognomy and hands. The attribution of these works to the same master or workshop is convincing only to a point: the facial types of the Amsterdam Christ and the Christ in the Crucifixion scene in La Gleize are indeed related, yet this argument holds far less true when comparing the La Gleize Madonna with its London counterpart. Didier dated the groups circa 1330-40, though a somewhat broader period seems advisable, especially in light of the scant number of documented works, as Williamson rightly observed.14
Frits Scholten, 2024
M.G. Terme, L’art ancien au pays de Liège: Album de l’Exposition universelle de Liège 1905, exh. cat. Liège [1907], no. 1346, pl. 18; J. Baum, ‘Die Lütticher Bildnerkunst im 14. Jahrhundert’, in P. Clemen (ed.), Belgische Kunstdenkmäler, vol. 1, Vom neunten bis zum Ende des fünfzehnten Jahrhunderts, Munich 1923, pp. 163-78, esp. p. 177; R. Didier, ‘Skulpturen des Maasgebiets aus den Jahren 1330-1360: Vom Meister der Maria von La Gleize bis zu Gilles von Lüttich’, Westfalen 55 (1977), pp. 8-29, esp. p. 19, fig. 19; Jaarverslag Nederlandse Rijksmusea 1978, pp. 23, 24, fig. 8; P. Williamson, Northern Gothic Sculpture 1200-1450, coll. cat. London (Victoria and Albert Museum) 1988, no. 24, pp. 96-101; C. Ceulemans et al., Laat-gotische beeldsnijkunst uit Limburg en grensland, exh. cat. Sint-Truiden (Provinciaal Museum voor Religieuze Kunst) 1990, under no. 2
F. Scholten, 2024, 'possibly Meester van de Madonna van La Gleize, Christ, from a Coronation of the Virgin, Liège, c. 1360', in F. Scholten and B. van der Mark (eds.), European Sculpture in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.174199
(accessed 23 November 2024 20:25:39).