Unknown Byzantine
Plaque with the Koimesis

CultureByzantine
Titles
  • Plaque with the Koimesis
Date10th century
PlaceConstantinople
MediumIvory
Dimensions4 3/16 × 3 7/16 × 1/2 in. (10.6 × 8.7 × 1.3 cm)
Credit LineMuseum purchase funded by the Laurence H. Favrot Bequest
Object number71.6
Current Location
The Audrey Jones Beck Building
200 Jamail Atrium
On view

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Object Type
Description

During the Middle Ages, ivory carving played a principal role in religious art and often achieved the highest quality of workmanship found in any medium. From the 9th to the 12th centuries in both the East and the West, the imperial workshops of ivory carvers primarily produced individual objects and elaborate ensembles for church decoration and use.


This scene represents the death of the Virgin Mary, an event called the Koimesis by the Greek Orthodox Church. The tiny plaque displays the sophistication of ivory carving during the middle period of imperial Byzantium (330–1453). Its disciplined style results from an adherence to dominant court workshop traditions in 10th-century Constantinople. Evident in this plaque is the Byzantine tendency to enhance the spiritual value of a religious representation by abstracting the forms and establishing a hierarchy among the figures. It also demonstrates strong classical elements, the virtues of which Byzantine artists discovered anew during the late 9th century and with which the Byzantine style is infused. The plaque is from a portable diptych or possibly a triptych representing major Greek Orthodox feasts.


ProvenanceErnst Kofler-Truninger Collection, Lucerne, Switzerland, from 1946 until 1971; purchased by MFAH, 1971.
Exhibition History"The Glory of Byzantium," The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, March 3–July 6, 1997.

"Byzantine Women and Their World," Arthur M. Sackler Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, October 25, 2002–April 27, 2003.

"Imprinting the Divine: Byzantine and Russian Icons from the Menil Collection," The Menil Collection, Houston, October 21, 2011–March 18, 2012.

Cataloguing data may change with further research.

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