Cartographic table, Nuremberg, c. 1553

Commentary
Cartographic table, Nuremberg, c. 1553

The excitement generated by the new technologies for capturing entire countries and continents cartographically was reflected in the proliferation in the sixteenth century of a wide variety of objects featuring maps. Some sense of this variety is provided by the objects and images in this section.

Here, for instance, we have a round table piece featuring a map of the Iberian Peninsula. The map is painted on the back of a pane of polished round rock crystal which rests on a slate plate. The seas were painted in the most expensive pigment of the time, lapis lazuli, the original bright blue colour of which has faded over time to a dull grey. This single object therefore combines scientific knowledge, practical mathematics, state-of-the-art visualisation techniques, exquisite craftsmanship, and precious materials. Its fabrication therefore required collaboration between artisans with very different skillsets: it is attributed to the German draughtsman, mathematician, and cartographer Augustin Hirschvogel (1503 – 1553) and the celebrated Nuremberg silversmith, Webnzel Jamnitzer (1507/8 – 1585).

Commentary: Howard Hotson (March 2024), derived in part from the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.

Literature: J. van Bennekom en D.J. Biemond, 'A Golden Landscape in an Ultramarine Sea: Research into the "Spanish Map" of 1552-53', The Rijksmuseum Bulletin 60 (2012), nr. 2, p. 100-115.