Box for circumcision instruments

1520–1530
Not on view
This remarkable leather box was made for an Italian Jewish family from the Renaissance period, probably to mark the birth of a son. It was used to store the implements for the ritual of circumcision, a ceremony that was first performed by Abraham in the Book of Genesis and on all Jewish infant boys when they are eight days old. On the lid, a bas relief depicts a continuous narrative of the Story of Abraham (Genesis 16:1- 16 and Genesis 21:4-21) with the circumcision at center, Sarah chasing Hagar and Ishmael from the scene at left, and a group of male soldiers entering the scene at right. The box is decorated with interlinking arabesques with leaf tendrils, two female busts in profile, birds, and rampant lion holding a palm frond. The image of a rampant lion is one of the most frequent on Jewish objects. This particular type of leather decoration is called cuir bouilli, a method in which leather is warmed and softened, allowing it to be molded, a common technique for crafting leather items during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries in Italy, France, Flanders and Germany.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Box for circumcision instruments
  • Date: 1520–1530
  • Culture: Northern Italian or Flemish
  • Medium: Leather (cuir bouilli), moulded and tooled, with traces of red polychromy and gilding, wooden carcass (conifer), painted interior
  • Dimensions: confirmed: 4 7/8 × 10 1/8 × 5 in. (12.4 × 25.7 × 12.7 cm)
  • Classifications: Judaica, Natural Substances-Leatherwork
  • Credit Line: Purchase, Wrightsman Fellows, Dina Axelrad Perry, Keren Keshet - The Rainbow Foundation, and Susan and Ed Falk Gifts, 2024
  • Object Number: 2024.358a, b
  • Curatorial Department: European Sculpture and Decorative Arts

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