
Accession number
MS M.1201
Object title
The Annunciation as an Allegorical Unicorn Hunt (MS M.1201).
Display Date
ca. 1500.
Created
Eichstätt, Germany, ca. 1500.
Credit line
Purchased on a grant provided by the Bernard H. Breslauer Foundation and with contributions from the Visiting Committee to the Department of Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts, 2016.
Description
single leaf, matted : vellum, ill. ; 127 x 190 mm
Provenance
Chichester, Henry Adams, 13 January 2016, lot 794; London, Sotheby's, 5 July 2016, lot 17; purchased from a dealer shortly thereafter.
Notes
Ms. single leaf with miniature portraying the Annunciation to the Virgin as an allegorical unicorn hunt.
A rare example of Nonnenarbeit (nuns' work: paintings or drawings made by nuns), this charming miniature lays out a complex iconographic program that fuses the biblical narrative of the Annunciation with the allegorical story of the unicron hunt. The Virgin Mary is seated in an enclosed garden (Hortus conclusus), while the Archangel Gabriel is outside its gates, sounding a horn and leading four hounds on the hunt for the mythic unicorn, which rests on the Virgin's lap. In line with the intended didactic function of this small devotional image, each of its iconographic details is clearly labeled, thus helping the viewer piece together the complex visual program. This combination of innovative iconography with clear didactic labeling is characteristic of devotional art produced by and for cloistered women in late-medieval Germany.
A rare example of Nonnenarbeit (nuns' work: paintings or drawings made by nuns), this charming miniature lays out a complex iconographic program that fuses the biblical narrative of the Annunciation with the allegorical story of the unicron hunt. The Virgin Mary is seated in an enclosed garden (Hortus conclusus), while the Archangel Gabriel is outside its gates, sounding a horn and leading four hounds on the hunt for the mythic unicorn, which rests on the Virgin's lap. In line with the intended didactic function of this small devotional image, each of its iconographic details is clearly labeled, thus helping the viewer piece together the complex visual program. This combination of innovative iconography with clear didactic labeling is characteristic of devotional art produced by and for cloistered women in late-medieval Germany.
Language
Latin
Resources
Century
Catalog link
Classification
Department