About This Artwork

Paris

Panel from a Monumental Window of the Heavenly Court, 1510/15

Stained glass
61 x 71.1 cm (24 x 28 in.)
The Art Institute of Chicago, Gift of the Antiquarian Society, 1930.947

Exhibition, Publication and Ownership Histories

Exhibition History

Art Institute of Chicago, The Antiquarian Society, The First 100 Years, April 23-June 19, 1977.

Paris, Galeries nationales, Grand Palais, France 1500: entre Moyen Age et Renaissance, 2010–11, no. 182.

Art Institute of Chicago, Kings, Queens, and Courtiers: Art in Early Renaissance France, 2011, no. 76.

Publication History

The Antiquarian 15, 6 (1930) p. 96 (ill.).

"Painted Glass Panel from the Monell Sale Shown in Chicago," Art News 29/24 (March, 14, 1931), p. 31.

Art Institute of Chicago, "Report for the Year 1931," Art Insitute of Chicago Bulletin 26, 2 (February 1932), pt. 2, pp. 20 and 39.

Virginia Chieffo Raguin et al, Stained Glass Before 1700 in the Collections of the Midwest States, Corpus Vitrearum, United States of America, part VIII (London, 2001), pp. 114-116, no. AIC 15.

Françoise Gatouillat, "La grande verriere occidental de Saint-Merry de Paris et ses auteurs: un cartonnier néerlandais au service d'ateliers parisiens," Revue de l'art, 147 (2005-1), pp. 69-78, here esp. p. 72, fig. 5.

Martha Wolff et al., Kings, Queens, and Courtiers: Art in Early Renaissance France (New Haven and London, 2011). pp. 149, ill.

Ownership History

Charles Robert Wynn-Carrington, 1st Marquess of Lincolnshire (16 May 1843–13 June 1928), known as the Lord Carrington from 1868 to 1895 and as the Earl Carrington from 1895 to 1912, Wycombe Abbey, Buckingham, England, before 1909 [according to note in curatorial file]. Jacques Seligmann, Paris and New York, 1909 [according to note in curatorial file]. Colonel Ambrose Monell, by 1930; his sale, American Art Association sale, New York, November 28, 1930, no. 50; purchased by Day and Meyer, New York, as agents for the museum [according to incoming receipt in Registrar's file].