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US_40: Heraldic Panel Hans Jakob Lehmann and Johannes Gmünder with Jonah and the Whale
(USA_Princeton_PrincetonUniversityArtMuseum_US_40)

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Title

Heraldic Panel Hans Jakob Lehmann and Johannes Gmünder with Jonah and the Whale

Type of Object
Dimensions
32.0 x 20.5 cm (12 5/8 x 8 in.)
Artist / Producer
Denzler, Hans · signed
Dating
1615
Location
Inventory Number
y1962-104
Research Project
Author and Date of Entry
Virginia C. Raguin 2024

Iconography

Description

A scene of Jonah dominates the panel. Amidst a blue and choppy sea, the whale opens a huge jaw to cast the prophet onto land. In the background is a boat with several masts and sails. Sailors are casting Johnah overboard. The whale awaits with open jaws. At the sides are two beige columns supporting green Corinthian capitals below two red impost blocks. Above, an inscription cartouche with green borders is flanked by vases of flowers against a white background. At the bottom, below a horizontal red band, the arms of the two pastor-donors are set in two oval laurel-wreath frames. The dedication panel lies between the arms.

Iconclass Code
46A122(GMUENDER) · armorial bearing, heraldry (GMUENDER)
46A122(LEHMANN) · armorial bearing, heraldry (LEHMANN)
71V22 · after a three-day sojourn in the belly of the monster Jonah is cast on dry land; Jonah may be shown nude and bald-headed
Iconclass Keywords
Heraldry

Arms of Lehmann, Hans Jakob: Azure a lamb argent with banner argent and or.
Arms of Gmünder, Johannes: azure a mill wheel or.

Inscription

Als Jonas drei Nacht und drei Tag/ Im Bauch des grossen Walfischs lag/ Warff er ut wide[ .]urn uff S Land/ Und ward gon Ninive gesand/
H. Hans Jacob/ Leeman der Zyt/ Pfarherr in der Grub./ H. Johanes Gmünder/ der zyt pfarrer Zum/ Spycher. 1615·
When Jonah lay for three nights and three days/ in the stomach of the big whale/ he [the whale] threw him out again to the land/ and he was sent to Nineveh
Mr. Hans Jacob Lehman the current pastor in the Grub/ Johannes Gmünder the current pastor of Speicher

Signature

HD

Technique / State

State of Conservation and Restorations

Many mending leads decreases the legibility and appeal of the panel. One stopgap appears in the middle of the column on the right.

Technique

Pot metal glass in red, beige, and pale blue is confined to the architectural border. The shields show an intense application of blue enamel and silver stain on uncolored glass, achieving bright contrasts. Enamel and sanguine, with silver stain, on uncolored glass are used in a more painterly application in the narrative scene. Blue enamel applied in varying intensities, augmented by grisaille wash modulated by multiple lines of stick work removing the paint, evokes a turbulent sea. Sensitive modulation of contours in the ship, sailors, and the two whales and Jonah is achieved through layers of wash also relieved by stickwork. The panel is dominated by the primary triad of red, yellow, and blue, resulting in a sprightly, energetic interplay of color.

History

Research

The panel was given by donors from the towns of Grub and Speicher, located in Ausserrhoden, about six and a half km (four miles) from each other in the Protestant section of the canton of Appenzell. Appenzell is on the northeastern portion of Switzerland, with the canton of St. Gallen between it and the Austrian border. The Reformation reached the area swiftly in 1522 through the followers of Martin Luther and Ulrich Zwingli. Of greatest influence was the scholar, physician, and reformer Joachim von Watt, originally from St. Gallen. The principle of self-determination in religion was reached by municipal accord in 1525 and in 1529 all by one of the towns in Ausserrhoden, had sided with the Reformation. These prosperous farming towns were small; in 1667, the population of Speicher was recorded at 908 and that of Grub at 543. For the individuals named, Hans Jakob Lehman was a pastor originally from Zürich but Johannes Gmünder was from Appenzell itself. The larger cities in Switzerland often had an excess of trained ministers who moved to remote cantons to serve as clergy for smaller towns (Koller, & Signer, 1926, IX).

The signature can be identified as that of Hans Denzler (Boesch, 1955b, pp. 43, 46). Denzler is documented as active in Zürich, until his death around 1647 (Mayer, 1884, p. 238). He is known for many commissions from the Protestant cantons of Appenzell and St. Gallen. There were great similarities among the workshops in each of these cantons. Denzler’s style and the composition recalls those of Hans Jegli (1579–1643) active in Winterthur. Compare the 1615 panel by Jegli of the meeting between Abigail and David (Boesch, 1955a, p. 42, fig. 11)

The Old Testament describes Jonah being called by God (Jonah 1) to preach to the inhabitants of Nineveh, in present-day northern Iraq. Seeking to flee from this daunting task, Jonah set out to sea in a ship from the port of Jaffa almost 800 miles away. The Lord caused a great storm and the sailors cast lots to see who was the cause of divine displeasure. The lot fell on Jonah, who admitted his transgression, and he was cast into the sea. The Lord sent a “great fish to swallow up Jonas: and Jonas was in the belly of the fish three days and three nights” (Jonah 2:1). During this time, he prayed until the fish “vomited out Jonas upon the dry land” (Jonah 2:11). The story of Jonah and the whale has been an essential part of Christian thought since the earliest centuries. Christ himself cited it as a symbol of his resurrection, saying “as Jonah was in the whale’s belly three days and three nights; so shall the son of man be in the heart of the earth three days and three nights” (Matthew 12:40). In the later Middle Ages, it was a part of typological codification of the Biblia Pauperum, which saw early printing in the 15th century (Henry, 1987, p. i).

Princeton’s panel appears to have been based on two prints of the subject by Jost Amman, originally from Zurich, who relocated by 1561 to Nuremburg where he became one of the most prolific illustrators of his time. An early work was Neuwe biblische Figuren dess Alten und Neuwen Testaments of 1565 (Amman, 1565). The book of about 140 images with labels in Latin and German marks Amman’s position as the premier illustrator for the Frankfurt publisher Sigmund Feyerabend (1528–1590). The wide dissemination of the 1565 publication is shown by the image of Jonah and the Whale copied in the 1579 Heraldic Representation of the city of Glarus in the Cloister of Wettingen (Ost VIIa; Hoegger, 2003, pp. 182, 382–83). In 1571, Feyerabend published a full text of Luther’s biblical translation with Amman’s illustrations (Amman, & Weis, 1571). The illustration from the Bible of 1571 is closest to the Princeton image of Jonah. Amman presents the huge mouth of the whale and great curving body in the very forefront of the composition. The boat, however, seems closer to the disposition in the 1565 picture book. The whale is shown a second time, as in the Princeton panel, about to swallow Jonah.

One of the most sophisticated of Swiss glass designers, Christoph Murer, executed a drawing dated around 1600, based on Amman’s engraving (Ruoss, & Giesicke, 2012, p. 565, fig. 599). The drawing is more dramatic, giving greater detail to the gaping mouth of the whale. This sketch may have exerted a direct influence on the Princeton panel. Jonah assumes a similar position on the beach, leaning on his left forearm as he looks back at the whale. The whale’s marvelous waterspout and tentacles extending from the nostrils are also identical. Workshops apparently shared imagery and/or artists copied preparatory sketches and finished panels. Thus, we find a drawing for a heraldic panel by Hans Jakob Nüscheler, dated 1627, with three coats of arms, and an exact replication of Murer’s drawing from a generation earlier (Ruoss, & Giesicke, 2012, p. 565, fig. 600). A panel associated with the Nüscheler workshop and dated 1647 repeats the exact disposition of the drawing and adds Fischart’s typological text (St. Petersburg, Hermitage Museum, no. B 220; Shlikevich, 2010, pp. 150–51, no. 58). A composite panel now in the Gotische Haus in Wörlitz, Germany, contains an almost intact central segment showing Jonah that must have been executed after the Murer or Nüscheler drawings. The date is estimated to be between 1600 and 1650 (Ruoss, Giesicke, 2012, pp. 564–67, no. XXX, 7, Abb. 121).

Cited in:
Record Art Museum, 1963, p. 19.
Raguin, & Morgan, 1987, p. 84.
Raguin, 1987, pp. 48–49, no 13.
Raguin, 1998, pp. 57–58, 63–65, fig. VII.4.

Dating
1615
Original Donor

Lehmann, Hans Jakob · Gmünder, Johannes

Previous Location
Place of Manufacture
Previous Owner

Stanley Mortimer, Princeton class of 1919

Bibliography and Sources

Literature

Amman, J. (1565). Neuwe biblische Figuren dess Alten und Neuwen Testaments geordnet und gestellt durch Johan Bockspergern von Saltzburg, den jüngern, und nachgerissen mit sonderm Fleiss durch Joss Amman von Zurich, Frankfurt.

Amman, J., & Weis, C. (1571). Bibliorum vtrivsqve Testamenti icones, svmmo artificio expressae, historias sacras ad vivvm exhibentes, & oculis summa cum gratia repraesentantes (published by Georgius Corvinus (i.e. Georg Rab) and Sigmund Feyerabend, Frankfurt.

Boesch, P. (1955). Die Schweizer Glasmalerei. Basel : Birkhäuser Verlag.

Boesch, P. (1955a). Die alten Glasmaler von Winterthur und ihr Werk: 286 Neujahrsblatt der Stadtbibliothek Winterthur, Winterthur.

Henry, A. (1987). Biblia Pauperum: A Facsimile and Edition, Ithaca.

Hoegger, P. (2003). Glasmalerei im Kanton Aargau: Kloster Wettingen, Corpus Vitrearum Reihe Neuzeit, vol. 1, Buchs.

Koller, E., & Signer, J. (1926). Appenzellisches Wappen-und Geschlechterbuch, Bern and Aarau.

Mayer, H. (1884). Fensterund Wappenschenkung vom XV bis XVIII Jahrhundert, Frauenfeld.

Raguin, V. (1987). Northern Renaissance Stained Glass: Continuity and Transformations [exh. cat., Cantor Gallery, College of the Holy Cross], Worcester MA.

Raguin, V. (1998). Glory in Glass: Stained Glass in the United States: Origin, Variety and Preservation [exh. cat. The Gallery at the American Bible Society], New York.

Raguin, V., & Morgan, N. (1987). 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.

Record of the Princeton University Art Museum (1963) 22/1, Princeton University NJ.

Ruoss, M., & Giesicke, B. (2012). Die Glasgemalde Im Gotischen Haus Zu Wörlitz, Deutscher Verlag für Kunstwissenschaft, Berlin.

Shlikevich, E. (2010). Swiss Stained Glass from the 16th-18th centuries in the Hermitage Collection [exh. cat. Hermitage Museum] St. Petersburg.

Image Information

Name of Image
USA_Princeton_PrincetonUniversityArtMuseum_US_40
Credits
Michel M. Raguin, with the permission of the Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton NJ, USA (artmuseum.princeton.edu)
Link to the original photo
Copyright
Public Domain

Citation suggestion

Raguin, V., C. (2024). Heraldic Panel Hans Jakob Lehmann and Johannes Gmünder with Jonah and the Whale. In Vitrosearch. Retrieved May 10, 2025 from https://test.vitrosearch.ch/objects/2721069.

Record Information

Reference Number
US_40
Author and Date of Entry
Virginia C. Raguin 2024