Q: Can you tell me more about Our Lady with the inkwell?
A: Our Lady with the inkwell is a fairly well known
iconographical motive, in
particular in Flemish, French, Italian and Spanish art of the fourteenth century. The motive is
part of the various representations describing Jesus growth and education, for example,
nursing, Jesus' first steps, reading lessons, etc. In the theme of the inkwell Jesus
learns how to write: fatigued, he falls asleep (Louvre, South-west school, ca 1400); or he
accomplishes two activities simultaneously: nursing and writing (ivory, Davillier
Collection. Louvre).
What does Jesus write? Some authors think of passages of Scripture such
as: Discite a me quia mitis sum et humilis corde. Other explanations suggest that ink,
inkwell and pen
are used to inscribe the predestined ones in the book sealed with seven seals, using as
reference the wellknown expression of Revelations: Non intrabit in eam (Jerusalem),
nisi qui scripti sunt in liber vitae Agni. The names of the elect could have been
members of a religious order or a confraternity (Antependium, Kunsthist. Museum Vienna).
See: M. Vloberg, La Vierge et l'Enfant dans l'art français, vol. II, 1939, pp. 31-35.
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