The Characteristics of Italian Collections of Gilt Leather as an Element of the Research into the Provenance of the Gilt-Leather Wall Hangings in Wawel Royal Castle
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.15633/fhc.3599Keywords:
The Wawel Royal Castle, Italian Collections of Gilt Leather, Baroque period, castle in MoritzburgAbstract
The Wawel Royal Castle is home to a large collection of gilt-leather upholstery from the Baroque period (1720s). They were not part of the original furnishing of the Wawel Caste, but were acquired in 1930s from the castle in Moritzburg, the seat of Elector of Saxony and King of Poland, Augustus II the Strong. In the course of complex studies on these wall hangings, the question of their provenance has not been investigated yet. Knowing that the king was interested in gilt leather from Venice, I am focusing on the collections found in several regions of Italy. The largest assemblage of gilt leather in Europe can be found in Palazzo Chigi in Ariccia. Thanks to the preserved archival materials of the Chigi family, their provenance has been linked to Roman workshops, even the names of craftsmen, and the dates of origin have been established, which is an extraordinarily rare exception. When it comes to other collections found in Rome, Umbria, Tuscany and Bologna, there is no data concerning the provenance of the pieces of art, nor the palce and source of their purchase. The largest collections of gilt leather can be found in two museums: the Stefano Bardini and the Stibbert museums, which constitute the embodiment of the collecting passion characteristic of the late 19th century. When compared with the leathers from Kraków, the Italian ones are earlier, as most of them are dated to the 17th century, they also differ in their decorative patterns and character respectively. Their decorations (the arrangement and motifs) echo the patterns used on fabrics. Unfortunately, in the archival material investigated and presented here there are no examples of gilt wall hangings that are decoratively analogous to the ones found in the collection of the Wawel Castle. In regards to the techniques used, the gilt leathers from Kraków feature those with a flat surface, variegated with the aid of punching, and with patterns highlighted with paint, which were most often manufactured in Italy. The technological aspects, however, cannot confirm where a given piece was made, as flat gilt leather was produced in other European countries. Similarly the place of origin cannot be determined by the analysis of the type of punching used. On account of that, the topic requires further investigation, with emphasis on the study of Venetian workshops.
References
P. D’Amore, ‘I parati e i tessili da arredamento’, [in:] Il Museo Nazionale d'Arte Orientale a Palazzo Brancaccio, [Livorno] 1997.
K. Aschengreen Piacenti, ‘The conservation campaigne [sic] at Villa Stibbert. Case studies’ [in:] Multidisciplinary Conservation: A Holistic View for Historic Interiors, ICOM-CC Interim Meeting, Rome 2010, pp. 1–9.
Bedeutende Goldledertapeten 1550-1900, Essen 1998.
A. Bender, Złocone kurdybany w Polsce, Lublin 1992.
A. Bender, ‘Dzieje złoconych kurdybanów we Włoszech’, in Summarium KUL 1995-1996, no. 24–25 (44–45), pp. 155-178.
M. Bercé, ‘I pannelli in cuoio dorato e dipinto del Palazzo di San Quirico’, [in:] Il Palazzo Chigi Zondadari a San Quirico d'Orcia. Architettura e decorazione di un palazzo barocco, a cura di M. Eichberg e F. Rotundo, San Quirico d'Orcia 1999, pp. 199–206.
A. Contadini, ‘Due pannelli di cuoio dorato nel Museo Civico Medievale di Bologna’, Annali di Ca’Foscari XXVII (1988), 3, pp. 127-142.
A. Contadini, ‘“Cuoridoro” tecnica e decorazione di cuoi dorati veneziani e italiani con influssi islamici’, [in:] Arte veneziana e arte islamica: atti del Primo simposio internazionale sull'arte veneziana e l'arte islamica, ed. E. J. Grube, Venice 1989, pp. 231-251.
G. Dehio, Handbuch der deutschen Kunstdenkmäler, Sachsen, vol. 1, Regierungsbezirk Dresden, München.
G. M. Fachechi, ‘George Washington Wurts, Henriette Tower, una collezione “di curiosità e opere d’arte” e una villa “magnificent, the handsomest ever bestowed on Rome”, [in:] Riflessi del Collezionismo tra bilanci critici e nuovi contributi, Atti del convegno Urbino 2013, ed. G. P. Folesani, A. M. Ambrosini Massari, 2014
Goldrausch. Die Pracht der Goldledertapeten, eds. S. Thümmler and C. E. Gerner, München 2006 (Kataloge der Museumslandschaft Hessen Kassel, vol. 37).
H. G. Hartmann, Moritzburg: Schloss und Umgebung in Geschichte und Gegenwart, Weimar 1989.
M. Kałamajska-Saeed, ‘Reklama handlowa holenderskich kurdybanów w XVII w. i obecne z niej pożytki’, [in:] Rzemiosło artystyczne. Materiały Sesji Oddz. Warsz. SHS, ed. R. Bobrow, vol. II, Warszawa 2001, pp. 191–196
E. F. Koldeweij, Goudleer Kinkarakawa. De geschiedenis van het Nederlands goudleer en zijn invloed in Japan, ed. Frits Scholten, Zwolle 1989.
G. Moroni, Dizionario di erudizione stolico-ecclesiastica da S. Pietro sino ai nostri giorni, vol. XXV, Venezia 1844.
M. Nimmo, M. Paris, F. Petrucci, ‘The leather furnishings in Palazzo Chigi in Ariccia: documentary sources’, [in:] Proceedings of the 10th Interim Meeting of ICOM-CC Working Group on Leather and related materials, Offenbach, 29-31 August 2012 (published in 2013).
M. Nimmo, M. Paris, L. Rissotto, Cuoio dorato e dipinto. Schedatura di manufatti. Repertorio dei punzoni, Roma 2008.
F. Petrucci, ‘Palazzo Chigi di Ariccia: parati in cuoio’, [in:] Vestire i palazzi. Stoffe, tessuti e parati negli arredi e nell’arte del Barocco, eds. A. Rodolfo, C. Volpi, Vatican 2014.
G. Rossignoli, Cuoi d'oro. Corami da tappezzeria, paliotti e cuscini del Museo Stefano Bardini, Firenze 2009.
A. Schulze, ‘Der Bestand an ornamentalen Ledertapeten im Schloss Moritzburg einst und heute sowie die konservatorisch-restauratorischen Problemstellungen bei ihrer Erhaltung’ [in:] Ledertapeten – Bestände, Erhaltung und Restaurierung, Dresden 2004
A. Schulze, Goldleder zwischen 1500 und 1800. Herstellung und Erhaltung, Dresden 2011 (Arbeitsheft 17 Landesamt für Denkmalpflege Sachsen)
O. Sieradzka-Malec, ‘Kurdybany wawelskie w świetle międzywojennych archiwaliów. Zarys problematyki’, Studia Waweliana XV (2013), pp. 61¬–77.
O. Sieradzka-Malec, ‘Złocone obicia ścienne w zamku Moritzburg i Zamku Królewskim na Wawelu – porównanie zasobów i stan badań nad proweniencją artystyczną dekoracyjnych skór’ [in:] Tendit in ardua virtus. Studia ofiarowane Profesorowi Kazimierzowi Kuczmanowi w siedemdziesięciolecie urodzin, Kraków 2017, pp. 219 – 231.
O. Sieradzka-Malec, ‘Wacław Szymborski. Pierwszy konserwator dzieł sztuki w zamku na Wawelu’, Studia Waweliana XVI (2015), pp. 187–210.
O. Sieradzka-Malec, ‘Gilt-leather wall hangings that have been identified in Venice are identical to those that adorn the interiors of Wawel Royal Castle in Kraków (Cracow)’, Perspektywy Kultury 21 (2/2018), p. 167-191.
B. Werner, ‘Die ornamentalen Ledertapeten im Schloss Moritzburg’, Sächsische Heimatblätter, 5/72, pp. 212–219.
M. Nimmo, M. Paris, F. Petrucci, ‘The leather furnishings in Palazzo Chigi in Ariccia: documentary sources’, [in:] Proceedings of the 10th Interim Meeting of ICOM-CC Working Group on Leather and related materials, Offenbach, 29-31 August 2012 (published in 2013).
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
The author declares that he or she has full copyright to the work, and such copyright it is not limited to the extent applicable to this declaration, that the article is an original work and that it does not infringe any third-party rights.
The author agrees to a free-of-charge, non-exclusive and non-restricted use of the work by Pontifical University of John Paul II in Krakow i.e.:
- to record and duplicate: make copies of the work by means of printing, reprography, magnetic or digital storage;
- to circulate the original or the copies of the work (disseminate, lend or lease the original or copies thereof, publicly display, screen or make the work publicly available so that everyone is able to access it at the time and in place they wish to do so);
- to include the work in a compilation;
- the Pontifical University of John Paul II in Krakow may grant sublicenses Creative Commons Acknowledgement of authorship-Non-commercial use-Without derivative work 3.0 Poland
The Pontifical University of John Paul II in Krakow makes the work available on the Platform Periodicals belonging to the University, according to the licence Creative Commons Acknowledgement of authorship-Non-commercial use-Without derivative work 3.0 Poland. Accordingly, the author authorises all interested parties to use the work on the following conditions:
- the author and the title of the work will be listed,
- the place of publication (name of the periodical and an Internet link to the originally published work),
- the work will be distributed in a non-commercial way,
- no derivative works will be created.