Skip to main content

The Lord's Prayer VII: the Temptation of Job: M.49E-1904

An image of Plaque

Terms of use

These images are provided for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons License (BY-NC-ND). To license a high resolution version, please contact our image library who will discuss fees, terms and waivers.

Download this image

Creative commons explained - what it means, how you can use our's and other people's content.

Alternative views

Object information

Current Location: In storage

Titles

The Lord's Prayer VII: the Temptation of Job

Maker(s)

Maker: Nouailher, Colin (Probably)
Designer: Holbein, Hans, the younger (After)
Printmaker: Monogrammist C. V. (After)

Entities

Categories

Description

Copper enamelled en grisaille with pink and red, and gilded. Job admonished by his wife and tempted by Satan with the inscription ‘ET NOVS INDVIS POINT/EN TENTATION’ (And lead us not into temptation). One of a set of plaques with M.49A-D & F-1904.

Rectangular convex copper plaque with a hole in each corner, enamelled en grisaille with a little pink, and red, on a black ground, and gilded. Clear, uneven counter-enamel with several blobs on the right side. Job sits on ashes, menaced from behind by Satan, and admonished by his wife who stands in front of him on the right. Job faces to his left with his head turned to his right, He is bearded, and naked apart from a white cloth over his knees. His body is covered with red boils.. Satan holds a blazing red switch, and behind him is a furnace spouting flames. Job’s wife wears sixteenth-century costume and has her back to the vewer. God appears in a semi-circle of clouds in the top right corner. Gold lines run round the edges of the garments. Running across the bottom of the plaque is a white panel inscribed in black with gold over it, ‘ET NOVS INDVIS POINT/EN TENTATION’ (And lead us not into temptation) followed by two curved gold lines. A gold line runs round the edge of scene and the inscription. The reverse is inscribed in black with the number ‘VII’. The plaque is set in an ill-fitting, rectangular, gilt-metal frame with repeating formal leaf border. The plaque is held into the frame by four bent over pins attached to the cardinal points on the reverse.

Notes

History note: Uncertain; possibly Robert Napier, West Shandon, Dunbartonshire by 1865; sold Christie’s, 5 June, 1877, one of six plaques in lot 2594; sold to Stettiner. Or, although smaller, G.H. Morland; sold Christie's, 10 May 1866, one of six plaques in gilt-metal frames in lot 437. An unidentified French sale in which the six plaques formed lot 289. An unidentified Italian owner or dealer before or after the sale. Frank McClean, MA, FRS (1837-1904), Rusthall House, near Tunbridge Wells

Legal notes

Frank McClean Bequest

Place(s) associated

  • Limoges ⪼ Haute Vienne ⪼ France
  • Basel ⪼ Switzerland

Acquisition and important dates

Method of acquisition: Bequeathed (1904) by McClean, Frank

Dating

16th Century, Mid
Circa 1540 CE - 1550 CE

Note

This plaque was originally the seventh in a series of eight panels illustrating the Lord's Prayer, of which six are in the Fitzwilliam (M.49A-F-1904). The first plaque shows 'Christ instructing the Disciples how to pray', the others have scenes associated with the Lord's Prayer which follows. The words are written in French below each scene. This plaque illustrates ‘ Lead us not into temptation’ (Matthew VI, 13). It shows a Job sitting in despair among ashes after Satan has afflicted him with boils from top to toe in order to tempt him to speak ungratefully of God. (Job, 2, 7-8).There are at least three other recorded plaques of this subject, see Documentation Two plaques from the series decorated in the same style in the Louvre were attributed to Colin Nouailher by Alfred Darcel (1867) and this was upheld by J.J. Marquet de Vasselot (1919-20) and Sophie Baratte (2000). This attribution was confirmed by the presence of the initials CN below the title on a plaque from the Lord’s Prayer decorated with the 'Deliver us from Evil' scene, acquired by the Musée de l’Évêché, Limoges, in 2007 (2007.5.2) with another plaque of the 'Give us our daily bread' scene (2007.5.1). The scenes illustrating the lines of the prayer were inspired by a set of metalcuts by the Basel monogrammist C.V. after Holbein which appeared in Desiderio Erasmus's 'Precatio dominica in septem portiones', published by both Johann Froben and Johannes Bebel successively in Basle in 1524. The work was first published without illustrations in 1523, and was rapidly translated into modern languages. The illustrations in the Froben and Bebel editions have the inscriptions in Latin, but a set of eight prints issued separately probably a little later with inscriptions in French, signed CV, is in the British Museum (1904.0206, 64,1-8;) and seven of the set (no. 4 is missing) are in the Cabinet des Estampes, Bibliothèque nationale, Paris (EA 25c in fol., p. 57). While the iconography of all the plaques was derived from these prints, the details differ considerably, in some scenes more than others. Lord's Prayer plaques were also executed probably by Jean II or III Pénicaud, and an enameller who signed 'KIP' or' KI'. These are in very different styles from the Nouailher plaques and include some scenes which were not based on the Holbein/CV illustrations.

School or Style

Renaissance

People, subjects and objects depicted

Components of the work

Decoration composed of enamel ( white, pink, red, and black) gold
Plaque composed of copper Height 12 cm Width 9.5 cm
Frame Height 13 cm Width 10.5 cm

Inscription or legends present

  • Text: ET NOVS INDVIS POINT/EN TENTATION’
  • Location: On front at bottom
  • Method of creation: Painted in black and gold
  • Type: Inscription

Inscription present: Roman seven

  • Text: VII
  • Location: On back
  • Method of creation: Painted in black
  • Type: Number

Inscription present: almost square label with a serrated edge and blue printed beaded border; underlined as far as 401

  • Text: 4899/sar (5/T000/N000/401/di una/venduta separat . .
  • Location: On back
  • Method of creation: Hand-written in black ink
  • Type: Label

Inscription present: a strip cut out of a sale catalogue

  • Text: 289 SIX PLAQUES en émail de Pierre Remond, représentant des scènes de prières avec inscriptions au bas en vieux français. Petit collection tres rare et digne d’un musée. Vois illustration page 3.’ and handwritten in black ink ‘CAT.B (or D) AVD
  • Location: On back
  • Method of creation: Printed in black
  • Type: Label

References and bibliographic entries

Related exhibitions

Identification numbers

Accession number: M.49E-1904
Primary reference Number: 156439
Stable URI

Audit data

Created: Saturday 6 August 2011 Updated: Sunday 3 March 2024 Last processed: Tuesday 5 March 2024

Associated departments & institutions

Owner or interested party: The Fitzwilliam Museum
Associated department: Applied Arts

Citation for print

This record can be cited in the Harvard Bibliographic style using the text below:

The Fitzwilliam Museum (2024) "The Lord's Prayer VII: the Temptation of Job" Web page available at: https://collection.beta.fitz.ms/id/object/156439 Accessed: 2024-04-19 01:24:18

Citation for Wikipedia

To cite this record on Wikipedia you can use this code snippet:

{{cite web|url=https://collection.beta.fitz.ms/id/object/156439 |title=The Lord's Prayer VII: the Temptation of Job |author=The Fitzwilliam Museum|accessdate=2024-04-19 01:24:18|publisher=The University of Cambridge}}

API call for this record

To call these data via our API (remember this needs to be authenticated) you can use this code snippet:

https://collection.beta.fitz.ms/api/v1/objects/object-156439

Bootstrap HTML code for reuse

To use this as a simple code embed, copy this string:

<div class="text-center">
    <figure class="figure">
        <img src="https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/imagestore/aa/aa20/M_49_1904_205_20_281_29.jpg"
        alt="The Lord's Prayer VII: the Temptation of Job"
        class="img-fluid" />
        <figcaption class="figure-caption text-info">The Lord's Prayer VII: the Temptation of Job</figcaption>
    </figure>
</div>
    

More objects and works of art you might like

Suggested products from Curating Cambridge

You might be interested in this...

Sign up for updates

Updates about future exhibitions and displays, family activities, virtual events & news. You'll be the first to know...