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Notes
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Tracing boards are used by Freemasons in their lodge meetings as visual aids in their ceremonies, and there is usually a tracing board for each of the three ceremonies. This example is painted on wood, although they can also be painted or drawn on cloth or paper, or made out of stone. Many of the Masonic ceremonies centre on the biblical story of King Solomon’s Temple, and so the central design here is two Freemasons standing outside of this temple. In the foreground are a set square, level and plumb rule. Freemasons make symbolic use of stonemasons’ tools in their ceremonies and they are often referred to as ‘working tools’. This tracing board is one of a set of three that were presented to the Bank of England Lodge No.263 by one of its members, Dr Robert Crucefix, in 1832.
Title
Second Degree Tracing Board
Date
1832
Medium
oil on wood
Measurements
H 51.5 x W 34.5 cm
Accession number
D2009/90ii
Acquisition method
on loan from the Bank of England Lodge No.263
Work type
Painting
Inscription description
Presented to the BANK OF ENGLAND LODGE, No. 499 BY BR. R.T. CRUCIFIX MD. W.M. AL 5832. AD 1832'