Pipe Box

Getty Museum

Pipe Box

Creator

UnknownAll works by this person →More on Getty ULAN
Date
about 1710–1715
Medium
"Bois de Sainte-Lucie" (prunus wood); brass; iron lock plate
Culture
French
Department
Decorative Arts
Institution
Getty Museum

A talented woodcarver decorated this pipe box with an unidentified monogram and quatrefoil reserves depicting *grotesqueries.* With wild hair, claws, or hooves, these grotesques play with smoking pipes in a bawdy manner, an allusion to the function of the box. Specialized carvers in the city of Nancy produced this box and others like it from a hard, dense variety of cherry wood known as *bois de Sainte-Lucie* (after a local convent). The industry flourished in the late 1600s and early 1700s, when Louis XIV decreed that small, personal objects such as vessels and toilette sets could no longer be made of precious metal; he needed the silver and gold to finance his wars. Patrons in the 1700s valued items produced from this wood for their deep reddish-brown color; lustrous, polished surface; they also admired decoration that imitated contemporary metalwork.

The authoritative record is held by Getty Museum. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.

Get printable QR codes

Open QR codes for this object page and the museum record. They stay collapsed until needed.

Open this page
See at Getty Museum

Related across collections

Semantically similar works from Getty Museum and other institutions.