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US_18: Heraldic Panel Renward Göldlin with the Baptism of Christ
(USA_LosAngeles_LACMA_US_18)

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Title

Heraldic Panel Renward Göldlin with the Baptism of Christ

Type of Object
Dimensions
68.3 x 70.2 cm (26 7/8 x 27 5/8 in.)
Artist / Producer
Dating
1594
Location
Inventory Number
45.21.24
Research Project
Author and Date of Entry
Virginia C. Raguin 2024

Iconography

Description

On the left, Christ stands in the river Jordan. Above him is the Dove of the Holy Spirit and above that God the Father appearing on a balcony in a celestial revelation. John, to the right, extends his hand over Christ to pour the water, He is shown “clothed in camel hair” represented by his brown tunic, over which, however, he wears a great red cloak. Two angels carrying Christ’s robes appear in the back of the scene. A dense crowd silhouetted against the landscape looks on from the right. At the sides. St. Renward is on the left and the Archangel Michael is on the right. An inscription panel supported by angels culminates the arch. Below, a coat of arms sits in the center of the dedicatory inscription flanked by angels. Fallenter’s love of variety in color finds its expression in the juxtaposition of the blues and greens of the landscape. Figures are in dramatic interaction, for example, the onlookers at the baptism who seem to be engaged in conversation. Drapery treatment evokes a density of fabric where folds coalesce into dense clusters as in the red cloaks worn by the Baptist and the Archangel Michael. Such pulsating compositions are augmented by twisting bodies, exemplified by St. Renward and St Michael.

Iconclass Code
11G · angels
11G183 · the Archangel Michael (often in armour with sword or lance)
11H(RENWARD)1 · male saints (RENWARD) - specific aspects ~ male saint
46A122(GÖLDLIN) · armorial bearing, heraldry (GÖLDLIN)
73C121 · baptism of Christ in the river Jordan: John the Baptist pouring out water on Christ's head: the Holy Ghost descends
Iconclass Keywords
angel · armour · coat of arms · head · heraldry · Holy Ghost · Jordan (river) · lance · Michael · pouring · river · sword · Trinity · water
Heraldry

Arms of Göldlin from Tiefenau, Renward: Quarterly; 1 and 4 per fess in chief argent two roses seeded or in base azure a fleur-de-lis inverted argent; 2 and 3 argent two fishes adorsed gules; crest: (LEFT) on a barred helm to sinister a ducal coronet and thereon a fleur-de-lis argent; mantling azure and argent; (RIGHT) on a barred helm to dexter two fishes as the charge; mantling of the colors.

Inscription

Johanes Taūfft Den Herr Zartt/ Der heillig Geist Geseehn Wardt (Above the scene. John lovingly baptizes the Lord. The Holy Spirit is seen.)
S. RENWART (sic) ORA PRO NOBIS (On halo. St. Renward, pray for us)
Rennhardus (sic) Göldlin Von Thieffenaūw protonotarius / Apstolus (Apostolicus) Thum Custor (Custos) Der Hochstifft pasll (Basel) Ch[..]herr (Chorherr) zu Münster Jm Ergouw 1594
(Below scene. Renward Göldlin of Tiefenau, Protonotary Apostolic and cathedral custodian of the collegiate foundation of Basel, cannon of Beromünster in Aargau, 1594)

Signature

FF

Materials, Technique and State of Preservation

Technique

The panel is composed of large areas defined by enamels and vitreous paints on uncolored glass. Pot metal glass in shades of purple, red and blue is also prevalent. Flashed and abraded glass appears in deep red areas such as the Baptist’s cloak. Two shades of silver stain are used, visible in the contrast of bright and dull yellows in the aureole around the Holy Spirit. Sanguine appears liberally to highlight flesh areas

State of Preservations and Restorations

The panel has been augmented with modern infill in the spandrels, producing a rectangular rather than arched format. The wings of both angels at the top date from this intervention. In addition, the Baptist's head and the right arm of the tunic are new. The lower inscription on the left is also replaced. In the same area, the figure of the angel is problematic. The lighter tonality and more superficial feel to the draftsmanship may very well mark an early replacement, or a stopgap used from another window in the series. Alternatively, the differences may be attributed to another painter’s hand within the Fallenter workshop.

History

Research

The original composition of Rathausen’s cloister, with its sixty-seven panels illuminating its walks, must have created an extraordinary space of prayer and meditation. The Baptism of Christ combines theology and personal expression as well as dramatic landscape imagery. The donor, Renward Göldlin (1531–1600), built a highly distinguished career. He was canon of the collegiate church of Beromünster in the canton of Aargau, since 1551, entering the priesthood in 1556. In 1574, he was named a Protonotary Apostolic, an office normally associated with a college of prelates in the Roman Curia, but which can be conferred by the Pope as a special honor to a prelate outside of Rome. He became a member of the collegiate chapter of Basel in 1578, and Custos (superior) of this chapter in 1592. Due to the Protestant presence in Basel, the Basel chapter was then situated in Freiburg im Breisgau, where it remained until 1678 (Boesch, 1953b),pp. 91–96). A circular panel of 1578 shows St. Renward with the arms of Renward Göldli surrounded by a border depicting the Seven Sacraments (VAM_21; Victoria & Albert Museum, London, 2212-1855). His biographers characterized Göldlin as an effective agent for the Catholic Counterreformation in Switzerland.

The patron’s name saint, St. Renward, on the left, dressed in armor and holding a staff, is historically problematic. Göldlin’s book plate from the Dietenberer Bible in the collegiate library of Beromünster shows his patron with a halo inscribed S. RENWART REX PORTOCAL (Boesch, 1953b, p. 94, fig. 3). Further exploration of the saintly king of Portugal has not been fruitful. On the right is St. Michael, the champion of God’s heavenly host, who vigorously transfixes a spotted dragon. As explained in the Golden Legend, Michael can easily be seen as a perennial symbol of the vanquishing of those who set themselves against the wisdom of God (Ryan, 1993, vol. II, pp. 20, 201–211). Thus, a champion of the Counterreformation would see Michael defeating Satan as a metaphor for the struggle against the heresy of the Reformers. There is further testimony of Göldlin’s affection for the archangel, however, as he depicted him on a bookplate dated 1576 (Boesch, 1953b, p. 94, n. 8).

Cited in:
Garland sale, 1924, no. 338, illustration showing the window in its original casements
Hayward, 1989, pp.72–73.
Raguin, 2024, vol. 1, pp. 24–26, 165–70, 176–77.

Dating
1594
Commissioner

Göldlin, Renward

Previous Location
Ehem. Zisterzienserinnenkloster Rathausen, Ebikon · East Wing of Cloister: opening 15
Place of Manufacture
Previous Owner

In 1841, Rathausen was suppressed and the windows were ordered sold. In 1853, the entire collection was purchased by James Meyer of St. Gall who split it, sending panels over time to sales in Vienna, London, Paris, and Berlin. The four at LACMA are recorded as remaining in St. Gall until 1890; they were subsequently in the collection of James A. Garland, Boston, until being sold to William Randolph Hearst at the Garland estate sale of 1924. Hearst gave them to the museum in 1943; they were accessioned in 1945.

Bibliography and Sources

Literature

Boesch, P. (1953b). “Renward Göldlin von Tiefenau und der Glasmaler Hans Sur von Basel,” Zeitschrift für Schweizerische Archäologie und Kunstgeschichte, 14.

Garland sale (1924). Rare and Beautiful Works of Art Inherited and Collected by the Late James A. Garland [sale cat., American Art Galleries, 17-19 January], New York.

Hayward, J. (1989). Stained Glass before 1700 in American Collections: Midwestern and Western States. Corpus Vitrearum Checklist III, ed. and intro. Madeline H. Caviness and Jane Hayward (Studies in the History of Art, 28), Washington, 1989.

Herder Lexikon (1968-76). Lexikon der christlichen Ikonographie, ed. Engelbert Kirschbaum, 8 vols., Rome.

Raguin, V. (2024). Stained Glass before 1700 in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the J. Paul Getty Museum, (Corpus Vitrearum United States IX). 2 vols. Turnhout, Belgium: Brepols.

Ryan, W. G. (1993). trans., Jacobus de Voragine, The Golden Legend: Readings on the Saints, Princeton NJ.

Unpublished sources: Hearst Inventory 1943, no. 249; Hayward Report 1978; Sibyll Kummer-Rothenhäusler, notes, identifying the panels as Lucerne, Kloster Rathausen, CV USA; Jane Hayward, notes, CV USA; Rolf Hasler and Uta Bergmann, CV Switzerland, 2016-2020, consultation and research for author.

Image Information

Name of Image
USA_LosAngeles_LACMA_US_18
Credits
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles CA, www.lacma.org
Link to the original photo
Copyright
Public Domain

Citation suggestion

Raguin, V., C. (2024). Heraldic Panel Renward Göldlin with the Baptism of Christ. In Vitrosearch. Retrieved June 4, 2025 from https://test.vitrosearch.ch/objects/2721047.

Record Information

Reference Number
US_18