On view

Orientation Gallery
Susan & John Diekman Gallery

Three Angels around the Altar of the Holocaust,

1557

French
y1946-102

European stained glass, a highly valued architectural material, received a place of honor in many churches and civic institutions, where it communicated religious and social values. How it did so varied across region and time, as seen in the diverse examples on view here. A royal commission depicting Louis IX (1214–1270), France’s sainted king, or an image of an archangel’s visit to the Virgin Mary to announce that she would be the mother of Christ, show rich colors in stained glass as well as glass painted with neutral line and shading. By the late fifteenth century, realistic three-dimensionality as well as large compositions in uncolored glass became standard. With a transformed economy, and in some cases, early democracy, middle-class individuals commissioned windows. A Swiss rural pastor proclaimed his admiration for the theo-logical insights of the fifth-century North African Saint Augustine and for the preaching skills of John the Baptist. A seventeenth-century town council used one of Aesop’s fables to encourage Swiss solidarity. The inscription extols service and fraternal ties, exclaiming that “unity is your strength!”

Virginia Raguin, Distinguished Professor of Humanities Emerita, Visual Arts, College of the Holy Cross

Information

Title
Three Angels around the Altar of the Holocaust
Dates

1557

Medium
Uncolored glass with silver stain, sanguine, and vitreous paint
Dimensions
53.8 × 46.4 × 1 cm (21 3/16 × 18 1/4 × 3/8 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Carl Otto von Kienbusch, Class of 1906, for the Carl Otto von Kienbusch Jr. Memorial Collection
Object Number
y1946-102
Place Collected

Europe, France, Saint-Étienne-le-Molard, Chapel of the Château de la Bastie d’Urfé

Signatures
Dated: 1557
Culture
Materials

Chateau de la Bastie d'Urfe. Didron Collection (Paris). Bashford Dean. Carl Otto von Kienbusch; 1946 gift to Princeton University Art Museum.