Scene from the Life of Saint Eustachius

Jean Pinaigiers French

On View

in

Decorative Arts Wing

Decorative Arts Wing

Decorative Arts Wing

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About the Artwork

When Eustace refused to sacrifice to the Roman gods as commanded by the emperor Hadrian, the saint and his family were placed alive in a bronze bull heated by flames to be killed. The legend tells that after three days the family was removed from the bull, and their dead bodies were miraculously undamaged. By the early sixteenth century the color range of stained glass had expanded and compositions were increasingly influenced by approaches to pictorial space and narrative derived from Italian painting. The use of grisaille, a black and white drawing technique, on the glass, permitted delineation of facial features, hair, textile patterns, and architectural elements in great detail.

Scene from the Life of Saint Eustachius

1543

Jean Pinaigiers

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French

Unknown

Stained glass: pot metal; white glass with silver stain, sanguine, and jean cousin

Overall (each panel): 84 1/4 × 34 1/4 × 1 5/8 inches (214 × 87 × 4.1 cm)

Stained Glass

European Sculpture and Dec Arts

Gift of K. T. Keller

58.113

This work is in the public domain.

Markings

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Provenance

Church of St. Patrice (Rouen, France)

until 1928, (A. Seligmann, Rey & Co., New York, New York, USA)

William Randolph Hearst (Los Angeles, California, USA)

sold by (Gimbel Bros., New York, New York, USA)

William Randolph Hearst Foundation. K.T. Keller

1958-present, gift to the Detroit Institute of Arts (Detroit, Michigan, USA)

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Provenance page

Exhibition History

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The exhibition history of a number of objects in our collection only begins after their acquisition by the museum, and may reflect an incomplete record.

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Published References

Stained Glass Before 1700 in American Collections: Mid-western and Western States (Corpus Vitrearum Checklist III). Studies in the History of Art 28. Washington, DC, 1989, p. 8 (ill.) p. 166 (ill. A).

Raguin, V. and H. Zakin. Stained Glass before 1700 in the Collections of the Midwest States (Corpus Vitrearum United States of America, Part VII) London, 2001, vol. 1, pp. 248-254.

Gallagher, B. "William Randolph Hearst and the Detroit Institute of Arts." Bulletin of the DIA 78, nos. 1/2 (2004): pp. 55-56, fig. 2 (ill.).

Hammer Galleries. Art Objects and Furnishings from the William Randolph Hearst Collection. Catalogue Raisonné Comprising Illustrations of Representative Works Together with Comprehensive Descriptions of Books, Autographs, and Manuscripts and Complete Index. New York, 1941, p. 329; p. 141 (ill.).

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Catalogue Raisoneé

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Credit Line for Reproduction

attributed to Jean Pinaigiers, Scene from the Life of Saint Eustachius, 1543, stained glass: pot metal; white glass with silver stain, sanguine, and Jean Cousin. Detroit Institute of Arts, Gift of K. T. Keller, 58.113.

Scene from the Life of Saint Eustachius
Scene from the Life of Saint Eustachius