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US_32: Heraldic Panel Anton Kempfen and Madeleine Obersteg with Judgment of Solomon
(USA_Baltimore_WaltersArtMuseum_US_32)

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Title

Heraldic Panel Anton Kempfen and Madeleine Obersteg with Judgment of Solomon

Type of Object
Dimensions
50.0 x 38.0 cm (19 5/8 x 15 in.)
Artist / Producer
Place of Manufacture
Dating
1602
Location
Inventory Number
46.47
Research Project
Author and Date of Entry
Virginia C. Raguin 2024

Iconography

Description

The panel is dominated by the image of Solomon’s judgment in the quarrel between two mothers, one of whose children is dead (1 Kings 3:16–28). Solomon sits on a raised throne flanked by lions with the two women before him. A throng of retainers surround the throne. The scene is set in an oval surrounded by an elaborate blue frame with large red bosses at the sides. Columns with a spiral pattern and acanthus capitals flank the oval. The inscription panel below is framed by a yellow border and flanked by two coats of arms. At the top of the oval is a light blue cartouche carrying a rhymed couplet that identifies the scene. The upper segment of the panel displays a center architectural element in red and green. To the left is the scene of Solomon receiving the Queen of Sheba and to the right, Solomon kneels before an altar carrying an idol.

Iconclass Code
46A122(KAEMPFEN) · armorial bearing, heraldry (KAEMPFEN)
46A122(OBERSTEG) · armorial bearing, heraldry (OBERSTEG)
59C · Justice and Injustice
71I · story of Solomon
71I5 · Solomon's women and idolatry (1 Kings 11:1-13)
Iconclass Keywords
Heraldry

Arms of Kämpfen, Anton: Azure two triangles voided and interlaced or, in chief two mullets or, in base a triple mount vert.
Arms of Obersteg, Madeleine: Gules a set of stairs or, in chief a mullet of six points or and in base a rose argent. [In Rot schrägrechts goldene Treppe (Steg) begleitet von sechsstrahligem, goldenem Stern und von golden besamten, silbernen Rose].

Inscription

Kinig Salomon urtheilt recht / Zwischen 2 Frowē also schecht/ (cartouche above. King Solomon judges truly between two women sent [to him])
1602 Anthoni Kempfen und/ Madlen Ober Steg sin/Eheliche Husfraw 1602 (cartouche below. Anthony Kämpfen [Kempfen] and Madeleine Obersteg, his wife, 1602).

Signature

none

Materials, Technique and State of Preservation

Technique

Red, green, purple, and blue pot metal glass is used in the frame of the central cartouche, adjacent architectural elements, the curtains of the throne room and the skirts of the two disputing mothers. Silver stain provides a distinctive green embellishment to the blue oval surrounding the scene. Blue and red enamel, sanguine, as well as silver stain provide the hues on the uncolored glass of the narrative scenes and shields. Dense application of vitreous paint results in the rich detail of the imagery and elaborate architecture.

State of Preservations and Restorations

The panel appears to be intact. Minor paint loss seems confined to the dedication plate.

History

Research

The family name Kämpfen is recorded in the canton of Valais (haute vallée de Conches; haute vallée du Rhone).
The central image may depend on a sketch attributed to Daniel Lindtmayer the Younger of Schaffhausen. Dated 1586, the panel shows the scene flanked by Justice and Hope and the arms of Daniel Lindtmayer and Werner Kübler the Elder below (Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Kunstbibliothek; Inv. Nr. Hdz01575; Hasler, 2010, fig. 103). The disposition of Solomon on his throne with the two women before him is based on the illustrated Bible by Johann Fischart and Tobias Stimmer (Neue künstliche Figuren biblischer Historien, Basel, 1579, reprint Munich, 1880, p. 85). The localization of the female donor from a family of Berne and that of the husband from Valais, a neighbor-canton of Berne, strongly suggests a Bernese origin for the execution of the panel. However, Lindtmayer and other artists produced variants on this theme, offering other models that might have been used by the Bernese glasspainter.

The panel appears to offer lessons to the beholder beyond simply the praise of Solomon as a model for good judicial conduct. We can perceive an anti-feminist warning. At the top Solomon is seen receiving a gift of flowers from a woman kneeling before him. This is presumably the Queen of Sheba. However, on the right, he kneels in front of an altar, and a young woman stands in back of him. On the altar is a figure of a man kneeling and holding a large shield. The Book of Kings refers at length to Solomon’s idolatry, describing how he offered sacrifices to pagan gods, here shown as the idol with the shield. “And when he was now old, his heart was turned away by women to follow strange gods: and his heart was not perfect with the Lord his God, as was the heart of David his father” (1 Kings 11:4). The text continues to explain that he built temples for various religions in order to please his many foreign wives. “And he did in this manner for all his wives that were strangers, who burnt incense, and offered sacrifice to their gods” (1 Kings 11:8). God, of course, was not pleased. One can compare an even more extensive warning in a panel dated 1605. The Arms of Ludwig von Erlach, flanked by the virtues of Temperance and Prudence, contrast four images of female seduction at top and bottom (SZ_29; Reding-Haus Collection, Schwyz). In the upper right, Solomon kneels before an altar that carries a similar image of a masculine deity holding a shield.

Cited in:
Hayward, Kummer-Rothenhäusler, & Raguin, 1987, p. 66.
Hayward, Kummer-Rothenhäusler, & Raguin, 1989, p. 311.

Dating
1602
Commissioner

Kämpfen, Anton · Obersteg, Madeleine

Previous Location
Place of Manufacture
Previous Owner

Countess de Bourg, Paris · A. Seligmann, Rey & Co., New York.

Bibliography and Sources

Literature

Hasler, R. (2010). Die Schaffhauser Glasmalerei des 16. bis 18 Jahrhunderts, Corpus Vitrearum Reihe Neuzeit, vol. 5, Bern.

Hasler, R., Landolt, O., Michel, A., von Reding, N., & Tomaschett, M. (2020). “Formen der Selbstrepräsentation: Die Glasscheibensammlung im Reding-Haus an der Schmiedgasse in Schwyz.» Schwyzer Hefte, 112. Schwyz, Schweiz: Verlag Schwyzer Hefte.

Hayward, J., Kummer-Rothenhäusler, S., & Raguin, V. (1987). in Stained Glass before 1700 in American Collections: Mid-Atlantic and Southeastern Seaboard States. Corpus Vitrearum Checklist II, ed. and intro. Madeline H. Caviness and Jane Hayward (Studies in the History of Art, 23), Washington DC.

Hayward, J., Kummer-Rothenhäusler, S., & Raguin, V. (1989). In Stained Glass before 1700 in American Collections: Midwestern and Western States. with Addenda and Corrigenda, Corpus Vitrearum Checklist III, ed. and intro. Madeline H. Caviness and Jane Hayward (Studies in the History of Art, 28), Washington DC.

Unpublished sources: Rolf Hasler, 2020-2023 consultation.

Model

Sketch attributed to Daniel Lindtmayer the Younger of Schaffhausen. Dated 1586, it presents the arms of Daniel Lindtmayer and Werner Kübler the Elder (Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Kunstbibliothek; Inv. Nr. Hdz01575; Hasler, 2010, fig. 103).

Image Information

Name of Image
USA_Baltimore_WaltersArtMuseum_US_32
Credits
The Walters Art Museum, Baltimore, Maryland USA
Link to the original photo
Copyright
Public Domain

Citation suggestion

Raguin, V., C. (2024). Heraldic Panel Anton Kempfen and Madeleine Obersteg with Judgment of Solomon. In Vitrosearch. Retrieved June 4, 2025 from https://test.vitrosearch.ch/objects/2721061.

Record Information

Reference Number
US_32