About This Artwork
Painted Ivory Casket12th century
Ivory, brass, tempera, and gold leaf
15.9 x 10.3 cm (6 1/4 x 4 1/16 in.)
Samuel P. Avery Endowment, 1926.389
Medieval to Modern European Painting and Sculpture
Gallery 203a
This type of ornately painted ivory casket survived in relatively large numbers in church treasuries. Judging from their Arabic inscriptions, which contain wishes for happiness, blessings, or glory, it is likely that many of them were originally intended for secular use as wedding gifts or jewelry boxers. However, they were often later used as reliquaries. Here traces of an inscription on the front rim and cover read, "May glory endure". This box was probably made on the island of Sicily, an important crossroads of Mediterranean trade.
Exhibition, Publication and Ownership Histories
Exhibition History
The Art Institute of Chicago, Medieval Decorative Arts from Chicago Collections, October 2, 1985-January 5, 1986.
The Art Institute of Chicago, Devotion and Splendor: Medieval Art at the Art Institute of Chicago, September 25, 2004-January 3, 2005, cat. 2.
Publication History
Perry Blythe Cott, Siculo-Arabic Ivories (Princeton, 1939), p. 33, pl. 7.
Ferrandis Torres, José, Marfiles árabes de occidente (Madrid, 1940), pp. 169-170, and pl. 39.
Ownership History
Achillito Chiesa, Milan, befor 1926 (his sale, New York, American Art Assoc, Inc., April 16-17, 1926, no. 368); Day & Meye, Co., as agent for the Art Institute [according to receipt in Registrar's file]; purchased by the museum, 1926.

