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US_25: Heraldic Panel Canton of Lucerne
(USA_LosAngeles_LACMA_US_25)

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Title

Heraldic Panel Canton of Lucerne

Type of Object
Artist / Producer
Göschel, Oswald · attributed
Dating
c. 1495
Dimensions
45.0 x 34.2 cm (17 ¾ x 13 ½ in.)

Iconography

Description

Two heraldic shields of the canton or the city of Lucerne face each other. The are silhouetted against a red damascene backdrop and rest on a green clover-filled ground. Two confronting lions place their forepaws on the top of the shields. Between the lions is a shield with the double-headed eagle of the Holy Roman Empire surmounted by the imperial crown. Above the scene are two crossing arches with a wildman on either side. The scene suggests three-dimensionality and engagement. The expressive wildmen direct the viewers’ gaze, the one on the left gesturing with his arm, and the one on the right pointing with a club, to the Imperial crown to underscore Lucerne's free status… More

Iconclass Code
31A44411 · wild man, wodewose, woodehouse
44A1(+3) · coat of arms (as symbol of the state, etc.) (+ province; provincial)
Iconclass Keywords
Heraldry

Imperial arms: Or a double-headed eagle displayed sable.
Arms of Lucerne: Per pale azure and argent; crest: an Imperial crown, supporters two lions.

Inscription

none

Signature

none

Technique / State

State of Conservation and Restorations

Surface corrosion and paint loss have diminished the legibility of the damascene pattern in the lower shields. Minor replacements in the upper and right periphery date to before 1922; a small segment containing the extended arm holding a club of the wildman on the right has been lost since that date. The green lower segments to the side may be contemporaneous stopgaps.

Technique

The panel consists of pot metal and uncolored glass with silver stain and vitreous paint. Silver-stain accents in the architecture of the vault and the figures of the wildmen in front of the spandrels reflect the yellow pot metal of the imperial crown and resonate with the warm neutral shades of the lion supporters. The deep red damascene ground contrasts in its intensity with the bright warm blue used in Lucerne’s shields. The cool bluish-green of the central segment of clover below forms complement the reds and yellows… More

History

Research

The panel is an early example of the format for arms of Swiss cantons, called a Standesscheibe. The shields are arranged as a pyramid, two repeated arms leaning towards each other in heraldic courtesy at the base. The presence of the imperial arms refers to the status enjoyed by the members of the Swiss confederation after their defeat of the Hapsburg armies in the Battle of Sempach in 1385 (technically: Reichsfrei, enjoying special status granted within the empire). Flanking the shields are supporters; here, lions… More

Dating
c. 1495
Period
1493 – 1500
Previous Location
Place of Manufacture
Previous Owner

The panel was in the Engel-Gros Collection until 1922, when it was acquired by the dealership of Homburger Frères, Paris (Engel-Gros sale, 1922, p. 22, no. 44). That same year, it was sold to William Randolph Hearst. In 1943, Hearst donated it to the museum; it was accessioned in 1945.

Inventory Number
45.21.27

Bibliography and Sources

Literature

Boesch, P. (1955). Die schweizer Glasmalerei, Basel.

Engel-Gros sale (1922). Catalogue des vitraux anciens français, allemands, suisses & divers des XIIIe, XIVe, XVe, XVII et XVIIe siècles composant la Collection Engel-Gros [sale cat., Hôtel Drouot, 7 December] Paris.

Hayward, J. (1989). Stained Glass before 1700 in American Collections: Midwestern and Western States. Corpus Vitrearum Checklist III, ed. and intro. Madeline H. Caviness and Jane Hayward (Studies in the History of Art, 28), Washington, 1989… More

Image Information

Name of Image
USA_LosAngeles_LACMA_US_25
Credits
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles CA, www.lacma.org
Link to the original photo
Copyright
Public Domain

Inventory

Reference Number
US_25
Author and Date of Entry
Virginia C. Raguin 2024