TY - JOUR
T1 - Collaborative Artisanship: Medals and Louis XIV's Royal Mint
AU - Wellington, Robert
AU - Clarke, Christina
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - During Louis XIV's reign, royal medals were fabricated in a workshop called the Monnaie des Medailles, situated at the heart of artisanal production at the Louvre. Medals were produced by a series of men appointed by the king, but the Monnaie des Medailles achieved administrative perfection under master goldsmith Nicholas Delaunay, who transformed the workshop into a space of performative display, where the kings most important visitors could marvel at the quality of medal-making equipment and witness the process of medal striking. Although scholars of medals tend to attribute specific medals to individual artists, struck medals do not correspond to contemporary ideas about the work of art's authorship. Here, we reconstruct six stages of making - design, modelling, production of punches, dies and flans, followed by striking - to elucidate the artisanal process and place these objects back into the hands of their producers.
AB - During Louis XIV's reign, royal medals were fabricated in a workshop called the Monnaie des Medailles, situated at the heart of artisanal production at the Louvre. Medals were produced by a series of men appointed by the king, but the Monnaie des Medailles achieved administrative perfection under master goldsmith Nicholas Delaunay, who transformed the workshop into a space of performative display, where the kings most important visitors could marvel at the quality of medal-making equipment and witness the process of medal striking. Although scholars of medals tend to attribute specific medals to individual artists, struck medals do not correspond to contemporary ideas about the work of art's authorship. Here, we reconstruct six stages of making - design, modelling, production of punches, dies and flans, followed by striking - to elucidate the artisanal process and place these objects back into the hands of their producers.
U2 - 10.54841/hm54-003
DO - 10.54841/hm54-003
M3 - Article
VL - 54
JO - Historical metallurgy
JF - Historical metallurgy
IS - 1
ER -