LaurieAnnie's photos with the keyword: crib

Detail of the Crib of the Infant Jesus in the Metr…

11 May 2008 725
Crib of the Infant Jesus, 15th century South Netherlandish; Made in Brabant Carved and polychromed oak, copper gilt, silver gilt, painted parchment, and silk embroidered with seed pearls, gold thread, tinsel, and translucent enamels; 12 1/2 x 11 x 7 1/8 in. (35 x 28 x 18.1 cm) Gift of Ruth Blumka, in memory of Leopold Blumka, 1974 (1974.121) This extraordinary miniature cradle, produced in Brabant and known as a repos de Jésus , served as a reliquary crib for the Christ Child. Such cribs were popular devotional objects in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, both in private homes and in convents. They were often venerated during Christmas festivities and may have been given as presents to nuns taking their vows. This splendid example, which comes from the Grand Béguinage in Louvain, features beautifully carved representations of the Nativity and the Adoration of the Magi on either end, as well as angels on each of the four bedposts. The Tree of Jesse—the biblical family tree of Christ—is illustrated on the embroidered silk coverlet, under which the Child (now missing) originally lay, his head resting on the Lamb of God embroidered on the pillow. Inside the bed is the case for the relic. Text from: www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/bnpr/ho_1974.121.htm

Crib of the Infant Jesus in the Metropolitan Museu…

11 May 2008 902
Crib of the Infant Jesus, 15th century South Netherlandish; Made in Brabant Carved and polychromed oak, copper gilt, silver gilt, painted parchment, and silk embroidered with seed pearls, gold thread, tinsel, and translucent enamels; 12 1/2 x 11 x 7 1/8 in. (35 x 28 x 18.1 cm) Gift of Ruth Blumka, in memory of Leopold Blumka, 1974 (1974.121) This extraordinary miniature cradle, produced in Brabant and known as a repos de Jésus , served as a reliquary crib for the Christ Child. Such cribs were popular devotional objects in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, both in private homes and in convents. They were often venerated during Christmas festivities and may have been given as presents to nuns taking their vows. This splendid example, which comes from the Grand Béguinage in Louvain, features beautifully carved representations of the Nativity and the Adoration of the Magi on either end, as well as angels on each of the four bedposts. The Tree of Jesse—the biblical family tree of Christ—is illustrated on the embroidered silk coverlet, under which the Child (now missing) originally lay, his head resting on the Lamb of God embroidered on the pillow. Inside the bed is the case for the relic. Text from: www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/bnpr/ho_1974.121.htm