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Sacrifice to Mars

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Sacrifice to Mars

Place of OriginBologna, Italy
Dateactive 1490-1520
DimensionsImage: 6.2 × 6.4 cm (2 7/16 × 2 1/2 in.)
MediumNiello engraving
ClassificationPrints
Credit LineWinthrop H. Perry Collection
Object number
1921.14
Not on View
Label TextThe earliest known Italian engravings are niello prints; impressions made on paper from small, incised silver plaques. The plaques were generally produced to decorate furnishings and liturgical objects. The engraver would often coat the plaque with ink and transfer the design onto paper to approximate how the finished metal piece would look once the grooves were inlaid with a dark metallic compound (niello) and then fired in a kiln. The heat causes the compound to fuse, creating a black, glass-like surface with silver details. The prints, originally used to check work in progress, became an end in themselves. Peregrino da Cesena was one of the artists who engraved metal plates in the same style as the niello plaques specifically in order to create printed images. The image shows a group of classical figures about to sacrifice a bull before an altar to Mars, the Roman god of war.Exhibition HistoryTMA, Storytelling in Miniature, October 7, 2011-March 4, 2012.
Le Bon Fumeur (after David Teniers)
Peregrino de Colle (Pellegrino dal Colle)
mid 18th-early 19th century
Altar Cross
Byzantine Empire
500-700
Chalice
about 1380-1400
Paten
about 1380-1400
Mars and Venus
17th century
Ottavino
Giorgio Da Trento
1594

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