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Source Description
This coffered ceiling, a fine example of Late Renaissance architectural desgin, originiated in a Milanese palace belonging to the nobleman Costopolino Aliverti (died 1582) and was masterfully carved by two local craftsmen. It would have been a splendid complement to the frescoes that covered the walls below. The decoration includes uplifting sayings in Latin carved into plaques, such as EX LABORE GLORIA ORITUR ("Glory arises from hard work"). Henry Walters purchased this ceiling through a Venetian dealer in 1903. He removed it from its original location in Milan and had it incorporated into his museum. The shape of the room, the Chamber of Wonders, is based on the dimensions of the ceiling. The attached photograph of a single section was taken when the ceiling parts were being unpacked. Since it is now hard to photograph in its entirety, you'll need to visit the Chamber of Wonders to fully experience it! See the article by C.D. Dickerson, III, "A Renaissance Ceiling in Baltimore from the Palazzo Aliverti in Milan," in "The Journal of the Walters Art Museum" 63 (issue year 2005; published 2009).
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
26006
label
Coffered Ceiling from the Palazzo Aliverti
core
obj
dtoType
object
citationUrl
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
26006
sourceUrl
contentType
object
stage
normalized
title
Coffered Ceiling from the Palazzo Aliverti
description
This coffered ceiling, a fine example of Late Renaissance architectural desgin, originiated in a Milanese palace belonging to the nobleman Costopolino Aliverti (died 1582) and was masterfully carved by two local craftsmen. It would have been a splendid complement to the frescoes that covered the walls below. The decoration includes uplifting sayings in Latin carved into plaques, such as EX LABORE GLORIA ORITUR ("Glory arises from hard work"). Henry Walters purchased this ceiling through a Venetian dealer in 1903. He removed it from its original location in Milan and had it incorporated into his museum. The shape of the room, the Chamber of Wonders, is based on the dimensions of the ceiling. The attached photograph of a single section was taken when the ceiling parts were being unpacked. Since it is now hard to photograph in its entirety, you'll need to visit the Chamber of Wonders to fully experience it! See the article by C.D. Dickerson, III, "A Renaissance Ceiling in Baltimore from the Palazzo Aliverti in Milan," in "The Journal of the Walters Art Museum" 63 (issue year 2005; published 2009).
provenance
Giuseppe Piccoli, Venice, prior to 1903; purchased by Henry Walters, Baltimore, 1903 [1]; by bequest to Walters Art Museum, 1931.[1] along with Walters 27.382-384 and 64.154
date
1563-1564 (Renaissance)
citationUrl
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
Wood
coffered ceilings
imageCount
1
pageCount
1
source
import
dimensions
units
cm
width
1423.4
height
774.2
dimensionsRaw
L: 560 3/8 x W: 304 13/16 in. (1423.42 x 774.19 cm)
Source extras
inscriptions
[Transcription] EX LABORE*GLORIA ORITUR; [Translation] Glory arises from hard work
med
carved wood with gilt and polychromy
creator_ids
4052
4633
15490
collection_ids
REN
exhibition_ids
none
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
92f8b668f531105e