Object data
pipeclay
height 5.7 cm
anonymous
Northern Netherlands, ? Utrecht, ? Deventer, c. 1475 - c. 1525
pipeclay
height 5.7 cm
Formed (solid) in a two-piece mould and fired.
Slightly abraded.
…; excavated at the site of the convent of the Sisters of the Common Life at Diepenveen (near Deventer), date unknown; collection professor Willem Moll (1812-1879), Amsterdam, in or before 1858;1 Rijksmuseum van Oudheden, Leiden, date unknown; transferred to the museum, 1898
Object number: BK-NM-11284
Copyright: Public domain
In the late Middle Ages, simple pipeclay (white-firing clay) sculptures such as this were serially produced in the Low Countries using moulds.2 Utrecht was unquestionably an important centre for the production of pipeclay devotional objects, as the large number of moulds and misfires unearthed there attest.3
Depicted is a naked Christ Child, a so-called Jéseau, holding a bird in his hands.4 Hundreds of this type of figurine exist, with minor differences often distinguishing one pipeclay sculpture from the next, with the added variation of the attribute held in the child’s hands.5 By far the most common attribute is a bird (cf. BK-KOG-1272-O and BK-KOG-11283), most likely in reference to an episode from the apocryphal Childhood Gospel that tells of how the Christ Child moulded small clay birds which he subsequently brought to life, allowing them to fly away as a prefiguration of his own resurrection.6
While the present figurine was excavated on the site of the former monastery in Diepenveen (near Deventer), similar figurines have been found throughout the country, including Halsteren near Bergen op Zoom, where an estimated 200 pieces were unearthed.7 During the excavation of a cesspit of the St Catharinagasthuis in Leiden, a pipeclay mould for making such Christ Child figurines was discovered.8
Such pipeclay infant figures of Christ typically had their own socle, which allowed them to function as freestanding images. Others were used for the purpose of ‘baby-cradling’, a religious ritual practiced both in the family context and monastic life. The infant Christ was laid in a small crib that one could rock back and forth.9 An intricately carved wooden crib in the Rijksmuseum’s collection features a cradle suspended between two stands with pins, thus allowing it to be rocked (BK-2013-14-1). Simple pipeclay figures of the infant Christ with integrated cribs also exist. They can be rocked on their rounded underside (cf. BK-NM-11289).
Bieke van der Mark, 2024
W. Moll, ‘Diepenveensche oudheden’, Kalender voor Protestanten in Nederland, Amsterdam 1858, pp. 93-98, esp. 96-98; J. Leeuwenberg with the assistance of W. Halsema-Kubes, Beeldhouwkunst in het Rijksmuseum, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1973, no. 890
B. van der Mark, 2024, 'anonymous, Christ Child Holding a Bird, Northern Netherlands, c. 1475 - c. 1525', in F. Scholten and B. van der Mark (eds.), European Sculpture in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.25653
(accessed 22 November 2024 12:09:38).