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Handstone with the Resurrection and Emperor Charles V after the Battle of Pavia

ca. 1560, Artist: Caspar Ulich

 

 

Handstone with the Resurrection and Emperor Charles V after the Battle of Pavia

Handstones are samples of rock or ore that have been artistically altered or augmented; mining scenes are generally combined with religious subjects. In the princely Kunstkammer, handstones symbolized the natural wealth of a country, but were also prototypical demonstrations of the bond between nature and art. The group preserved from the collection of Archduke Ferdinand II is today the most significant of its kind worldwide.

Location: Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien, Kunstkammer Wien Raum XXIV

Object data

Object Name

Handstone

Culture

Jáchymov (St. Joachimsthal)

Dated

ca. 1560

Artist

Caspar Ulich (nachweisbar 1555 - 1576 St. Joachimsthal)

Material

Acanthite, gilded silver

Dimensions

H. 31,7 cm

Signed

CV

Inscribed

"PLVS OVLTRA"; "FATA DABVNT AQVILAM TE GALLVM VINCERE POSSE * REGNET AVIS CHRISTI NE MODO LAEDAT OVES"

Image rights

Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien, Kunstkammer

Inv. No.

Kunstkammer, 4148

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