Tabernacle Relief with Flanking Angels

Description

This relief once framed a tabernacle—a receptacle above and behind an altar for the safekeeping of the Eucharist. The inscription over the doorway, LOCHVS SANCTVS (Holy Place), and below, LAVS DEO (Praise God), confirm the relief’s intended purpose. Originally, a door at center, perhaps in gilt bronze, would have secured the tabernacle. The pose, costumes, and modeling of the flanking angels all suggest the hand of a gifted artist probably working under the influence of Tullio Lombardo, a brilliant Venetian marble sculptor.

Provenance

Heinrich Miller con Aicholz (Vienna, Austria), by forced sale to the City of Vienna, 1938; 1938-1945 City of Vienna, occupied after World War II by the French government; 1945 - French government; Camillo Castiglioni, 1959-1957 (Vienna, Austria); Jacques Seligmann and Co., sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art, 1975.

Tabernacle Relief with Flanking Angels

Tullio Lombardo

c. 1480–1500

Accession Number

1975.105

Medium

polychromed marble

Dimensions

Overall: 81.3 x 108.6 cm (32 x 42 3/4 in.)

Classification

Sculpture

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund