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Christoph Jamnitzer’s Speechless Defense of the Goldsmith’s Strengths

  • Shira Brisman EMAIL logo
Published/Copyright: September 16, 2020
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Abstract

In 1616, the Nuremberg goldsmith Christoph Jamnitzer completed a commission for one patrician, Ernst Haller von Hallerstein, that served as a gift to another, Jacob Stark von Reckenhoff. In depicting at the cup’s stem the image of the ancient wrestler Milo of Croton carrying a bull, Jamnitzer alluded to an emblem decorating the city hall to pun on the associations with strength in the recipient’s last name. The iconography of the vessel thus bound the owner of the object to the virtues promoted in the building of governance at the same time that it demonstrated the goldsmith’s virtuosic balancing of weight. The cup thus makes visible the material and metaphorical links between the skills of the goldsmith’s craft and the ethics and politics of the free imperial city.

  1. Photo Credits: 1, 2, 7, 12–14 Germanisches Nationalmuseum, Nuremberg. — 3 Stadtgeschichtliche Museen, Nuremberg. — 4 Courtesy of Duke University Libraries, Durham, North Carolina. — 5, 16, 18 Stadtbibliothek, Nuremberg. — 6 Kislak Center at Van Pelt Library, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. — 8 Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte, Photothek, Munich. — 9–11 Rijksprentenkabinet, Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam. — 15 Universitätsbibliothek, Würzburg. — 17 Staatsarchiv, Nuremberg.

Published Online: 2020-09-16
Published in Print: 2020-09-25

© 2020 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

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