cameo ca. 1530–40, frame 19th century, Krakow

cameo ca. 1530–40, frame 19th century, Krakow

Identifier
17.190.869
Transfer of custody
Victoria and Albert Museum
Acquisition
Gift of J. Pierpont Morgan, 1917
Collection
Technique
Depiction
Dimension
7.2 cm (height)
4.4 cm (width)
Production time
Production place

Description

Exceptionally for the Renaissance, this is a signed cameo, bearing the signature of Gian Giacomo Caraglio, who was born in Verona and later worked in Venice and then Cracow and who was best known as a printmaker. Bona Sforza, daughter of the duke of Milan, married Sigismund I, king of Poland, in 1518. At Sigismund’s death in 1548 she returned to Italy, where she died in 1557. The cameo is inlaid with gold that enhances details of Bona’s chain and hairnet, and a silver Medusa’s head is inset on her breast, in the same spirit of jewelry within jewelry. The only other gem signed by Caraglio, an agate similarly bedecked with gold representing Barbara Radziwill, Bona’s successor as queen of Poland, is in the Münzkabinett, Munich. The dainty frame, although dated 1554 on the reverse, is a nineteenth-century invention.[James D. Draper, 2008]