A Woman Mourning

Image credit: The Henry Barber Trust, The Barber Institute of Fine Arts, University of Birmingham

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Notes

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A woman, standing, clasps her hands tightly around her heavily draped body. She peers out from under her headdress with a sombre expression and slightly pursed lips. This small figure was probably part of a funerary monument. It relates very closely to a ‘master’ prototype once in the collection of Louvre curator Charles Sterling (1901–1991); see the 1971 Musée des beaux-arts de Dijon exhibition on this subject, entitled les Pleurants dans l’Art du Moyen Age en Europe. However, recent expert advice (in 2021) has expressed doubt over its authenticity, due to its relative lack of stylistic and technical finesse, and of suitability for its ostensible function. In particular, the figure is carved completely in the round (with unconvincing drapery folds laid in parallel rows) and yet, if genuine, would need to have a completely flat back to have adhered to the parent monument.

The Barber Institute of Fine Arts

Birmingham

Title

A Woman Mourning

Date

15th C

Medium

marble

Measurements

Plinth: H 5.8 x W 5.7 x D 5 cm;
H 14.8 x W 4.5 x D 4 cm

Accession number

58.5

Acquisition method

purchased from Arcade Gallery, 1958

Work type

Statue

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The Barber Institute of Fine Arts

University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham, West Midlands B15 2TS England

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