A painted ''desco da parto'' (a birth tray or birth salver) was an important symbolic gift on the occasion of a successful birth in late medieval and
Early Modern Florence and
Siena. The surviving painted ''deschi'' represented in museum collections were commissioned by elite families, but inventories show that birth trays and other special birth objects like embroidered pillows were kept long after the successful birth in families of all classes: when
Lorenzo de' Medici died, the inventory shows that the ''desco da parto'' given by his father to his mother,
Lucrezia Tornabuoni, at her
lying-in, was hanging in his private quarters to the day of his death.
A ''desco da parto'' need not have been specially commissioned; they were produced in workshops in series for stock, often being personalised with a
coat-of-arms when they were bought. There was a distinctive repertoire of
iconography
Iconography, as a branch of art history, studies the identification, description and interpretation of the content of images: the subjects depicted, the particular compositions and details used to do so, and other elements that are distinct fro ...
for the trays, the
recto (top) sides sharing much with that for the painted
cassone chests often used as gifts at marriage, but also with
verso (bottom) sides often showing scenes of mothers after
childbirth or pin-up figures of boy toddlers, accompanied by the coats of arms of both parents. After being used as a tray during the period of
postpartum confinement
Postpartum confinement is a traditional practice following childbirth. Those who follow these customs typically begin immediately after the birth, and the seclusion or special treatment lasts for a culturally variable length: typically for one mon ...
, they could be hung on a wall as a painting.
Usage
Infant mortality
Infant mortality is the death of young children under the age of 1. This death toll is measured by the infant mortality rate (IMR), which is the probability of deaths of children under one year of age per 1000 live births. The under-five morta ...
was highest during the crucial first days, when the mother might also succumb to
childbed fever
Postpartum infections, also known as childbed fever and puerperal fever, are any bacterial infections of the female reproductive tract following childbirth or miscarriage. Signs and symptoms usually include a fever greater than , chills, lower a ...
. A successful childbirth was lavishly celebrated. Sons would one day assert the family interests, whether in modest workshop or banking house; daughters would share the household's work until they were married and would cement the
exogamous ties that stabilized Tuscan family position at every social level. Painted childbirth trays began to appear about 1370, in the generation following the
Black Death
The Black Death (also known as the Pestilence, the Great Mortality or the Plague) was a bubonic plague pandemic occurring in Western Eurasia and North Africa from 1346 to 1353. It is the most fatal pandemic recorded in human history, causi ...
, when the tenuousness of life was more vivid than ever. In the fifteenth century, D.C. Ahl found, at least one appears in almost half of all inventories she surveyed.
The mother was expected to remain "
lying in", enjoying
bed rest during a
postpartum period of variable duration, but probably lasting at least a week. No fixed term of lying-in is recommended in Renaissance manuals on family life (unlike in some other cultures, see
Postpartum confinement
Postpartum confinement is a traditional practice following childbirth. Those who follow these customs typically begin immediately after the birth, and the seclusion or special treatment lasts for a culturally variable length: typically for one mon ...
), but it appears from documentary records that the mother was rarely present at the
baptism, in Italian cities usually held within a week of the birth at the local
parish church, normally a few minutes' walk from any house. During this period the mother and child were visited in the bedroom by family and female friends, and presented with gifts. The tray or
salver, often covered with a protective cloth, was used for serving delicacies to the visitors, perhaps including some they had brought as presents: a maid brings a cloth-covered ''desco'' with two carafes of water and wine to fortify
Saint Anne
According to Christian apocryphal and Islamic tradition, Saint Anne was the mother of Mary and the maternal grandmother of Jesus. Mary's mother is not named in the canonical gospels. In writing, Anne's name and that of her husband Joachim come o ...
in
Paolo Uccello's fresco of the ''Birth of the Virgin'' (1436), in the Chapel of the Annunciation, Duomo of Prato,
Raiment might be ceremoniously brought into the specially-decorated
bedchamber
A bedroom or bedchamber is a room situated within a residential or accommodation unit characterised by its usage for sleeping and sexual activity. A typical western bedroom contains as bedroom furniture one or two beds (ranging from a crib for ...
where the new mother lay: in
a ''desco da parto'' by Masaccio of 1427, the tray and a covered cup are preceded by a pair of trumpeters flying banners with the Florentine ''
gigli''. In fact, in patrician households the bed was often placed in a reception room for the occasion (if there was not one already in such a room, after the fashion of the French and
Burgundian courts), and the mother lay there while receiving visits from her friends over several days.
Iconography
For the painted trays made for the elite on these joyous occasions, in general, both sides of the tray are painted, the upper side (or
recto) generally with a crowded figure scene, usually secular, such as a scene from
classical myth
Classical mythology, Greco-Roman mythology, or Greek and Roman mythology is both the body of and the study of myths from the ancient Greeks and ancient Romans as they are used or transformed by cultural reception. Along with philosophy and polit ...
or a suitable
allegory
As a literary device or artistic form, an allegory is a narrative or visual representation in which a character, place, or event can be interpreted to represent a hidden meaning with moral or political significance. Authors have used allegory th ...
. Scenes from the
Old Testament
The Old Testament (often abbreviated OT) is the first division of the Christian biblical canon, which is based primarily upon the 24 books of the Hebrew Bible or Tanakh, a collection of ancient religious Hebrew writings by the Israelites. The ...
or the Christian religious repertoire also appear in some cases. Birthing scenes were popular. These might be the ''
Birth of the Virgin'' or that of Florence's patron saint,
John the Baptist, but only a halo or two distinguishes these from other scenes apparently showing a birth scene as a
genre painting
Genre painting (or petit genre), a form of genre art, depicts aspects of everyday life by portraying ordinary people engaged in common activities. One common definition of a genre scene is that it shows figures to whom no identity can be attached ...
. A tray in the
New York Historical Society
The New-York Historical Society is an American history museum and library in New York City, along Central Park West between 76th and 77th Streets, on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. The society was founded in 1804 as New York's first museum. ...
shows a genre birthing scene but is closely copied from a drawing of the birth of John the Baptist by
Lorenzo Monaco
Lorenzo Monaco (1370 – 1425) was an Italian painter of the late Gothic to early Renaissance age. He was born Piero di Giovanni in Siena, Italy. Little is known about his youth, apart from the fact that he was apprenticed in Florence. He was inf ...
.
In all these the mother sits up in bed receiving gifts from a stream of female visitors, while at the front of the scene the child is washed or wrapped in
swaddling by more women. In one male pageboys serve the guests. Another tray shows boys and men playing a local fighting game in the street (see gallery). The earliest painted illustration of a ''
novella
A novella is a narrative prose fiction whose length is shorter than most novels, but longer than most short stories. The English word ''novella'' derives from the Italian ''novella'' meaning a short story related to true (or apparently so) facts ...
'' of
Boccaccio is on a Florentine ''desco da parto'' with the arms of a Pisan family, made c. 1410 and in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The survivals include three allegorical scenes of the ''
Triumph of Love'', derived from
Petrarch's ''
Triumphs'', and one ''Triumph of Venus''.
The underside or
verso generally has a simpler and often less elevated subject, with fewer, larger figures, and usually includes
heraldry
Heraldry is a discipline relating to the design, display and study of armorial bearings (known as armory), as well as related disciplines, such as vexillology, together with the study of ceremony, rank and pedigree. Armory, the best-known branch ...
, with the arms of both parents shown. Scenes with one or two naked boy toddlers, with the
coats of arms
A coat of arms is a heraldic visual design on an escutcheon (i.e., shield), surcoat, or tabard (the latter two being outer garments). The coat of arms on an escutcheon forms the central element of the full heraldic achievement, which in its wh ...
of both parents at the sides, are especially popular. The arms of the mother's family traditionally take the right hand side, but in some examples the arms have been changed by overpainting them. Inscriptions in the field or round the rim sometimes provide the date of the fortunate event, providing art historians with a useful fixed point. Like some other types of art, such as the
"Otto prints", desci were mostly expected to be decorated in what was considered to be feminine taste, although how the design was selected is unclear. In an example painted by
Masaccio's brother two boys wrestle, with certainly one and probably both using the hold of pulling on the other's penis with one hand and hair with the other (see gallery).
In the Renaissance it was believed that the sights a pregnant woman saw affected her pregnancy and even what it produced –
Martin Luther told the cautionary story of a woman frightened by a mouse in pregnancy, who then gave birth to a mouse. Manuals advised keeping images with a positive impact in the sight of pregnant women, and it is in this context that the recurrent naked boys, and the scenes showing the end of a successful childbirth, should be seen. This was also a factor in the display of images of the
Virgin and Child, which were ubiquitous in bedrooms. Probably the desci were hung with the verso displayed during pregnancy, to promote the production of a similar healthy boy.
;Two pairs of images
File:Scuola fiorentina, desco da parto, 1420 ca, diam. 51, coll. privata 01.JPG, ''Garden of Love'', recto c. 1420, 51 cm diameter
File:Scuola fiorentina, desco da parto, 1420 ca, diam. 51, coll. privata 02.JPG, Verso of the last, with 2 coats of arms and a boy with a stork(?)
File:Lo Scheggia - Game of Civettino (a Birth Salver) - WGA20984.jpg, A game of Civettino, recto c. 1450, by Masaccio's brother
File:Lo Scheggia - Game of Civettino (a Birth Salver) - WGA20983.jpg, Verso, as last. Two boys engage in no holds barred wrestling
Artists and history
Workshops that produced ''deschi da parto'' were often also
manuscript illuminators, as for example
Bartolomeo di Fruosino
Bartolomeo di Fruosino (1366 or 1369 – 7 December 1441) was an Italian painter and illuminator of the Florentine School and Renaissance art.
Bartolomeo was born, and lived and worked his whole life in Florence. Part of the indecision abou ...
, an illuminator who also produced panel paintings, and painters of the panels that were incorporated into the fronts and ends of ''quattrocento'' ''
cassoni
A cassone (plural ''cassoni'') or marriage chest is a rich and showy Italian type of chest, which may be inlaid or carved, prepared with gesso ground then painted and gilded. '' Pastiglia'' was decoration in low relief carved or moulded in ge ...
''. Such a workshop was that of the "Master of the Adimari cassone", now usually identified as Masaccio's brother
Giovanni di ser Giovanni Guidi
Giovanni di Ser Giovanni, (1406 – 1486) also known as Lo Scheggia, or "the Splinter" was an Italians, Italian painter who was born in San Giovanni Valdarno and was brother to the famous Masaccio.
Biography
Born in San Giovanni in Altura, ...
(or "Lo Scheggia", "the Splinter"), which also produced the ''desco da parto'' showing youths playing at ''civettino'' in an urban setting, in
Palazzo Davanzati, Florence, and other examples. A divided verso showing two naked boys fighting realized $482,500 at auction in 2012.
Some artists remain unidentified, and were clearly not of the first rank, but, given the significant names represented among the tiny proportion of survivors, it appears that many artists took an occasional break from larger projects to produce ''desci''. The circular
tondo shape in normal
panel paintings, which became fashionable in the mid-fifteenth century in Florence, may have developed from the smaller desci.
The format of the desco, usually about 50 to 60 cm across, is with twelve or sixteen sides, or from about 1430, round, enclosed within a slightly raised lip integral to the panel. Some examples that are now round seem to have originally been twelve-sided. Some have dates that record the day of the birth (or marriage) concerned. Only about two dozen desci survive, some now with the surfaces sawn apart by dealers in modern times, to create two works. In inventories they are often described as "broken" or "old", and most apparently were used as trays until too scruffy to keep. As the 15th century continued they were gradually replaced as gifts by pieces of
majolica, often special "birthing sets" with similar iconography, although the
Uffizi has an example of 1524 by
Jacopo Pontormo, and others are even later. Examples from the 16th-century tend to have a more raised bowl-like profile, as in the Pontormo, as if echoing the new maiolica shapes. Production of painted cassoni ceased over the same decades.
Jacqueline Marie Musacchio rejects the common assumption that these trays were made to celebrate a marriage; she never encountered a ''desco da nozze'' in any 15th-century inventory. But a Sienese wedding casket (''cofanetto nuziale'') in wood in the Louvre has a round top with a ''Triumph of Venus'' by
Giovanni di Paolo
Giovanni di Paolo di Grazia (''c.'' 1403–1482) was an Italian painter, working primarily in Siena, becoming a prolific painter and illustrator of manuscripts, including Dante's texts. He was one of the most important painters of the 15th ce ...
(dated 1421) that is effectively identical to the desci form. Nevertheless, if they were presented at the time of the marriage, though certainly regarded as associated specifically with pregnancy and childbirth, this would both explain how such elaborate objects were available for use very soon after an uncertain event, and mean that the beneficial images of boys could exert their positive influence throughout the important first pregnancy.
Example in San Francisco
The
San Francisco Legion of Honor Museum has an example painted about 1400 by
Lorenzo di Niccolo
Lorenzo may refer to:
People
* Lorenzo (name)
Places Peru
* San Lorenzo Island (Peru), sometimes referred to as the island of Lorenzo
United States
* Lorenzo, Illinois
* Lorenzo, Texas
* San Lorenzo, California, formerly Lorenzo
* Lorenzo State ...
, a Florentine painter who was active from 1391 to 1412. The recto shows the story of
Diana
Diana most commonly refers to:
* Diana (name), a given name (including a list of people with the name)
* Diana (mythology), ancient Roman goddess of the hunt and wild animals; later associated with the Moon
* Diana, Princess of Wales (1961–1997) ...
and
Actaeon
Actaeon (; grc, Ἀκταίων ''Aktaion''), in Greek mythology, son of the priestly herdsman Aristaeus and Autonoe in Boeotia, was a famous Theban hero. Like Achilles in a later generation, he was trained by the centaur Chiron.
He fell to ...
. Diana, goddess of hunting appears in the foreground clothed in a dark, brocaded robe and carrying a falcon; at the right, her nymphs pursue a boar. At the top of the painting, Diana and her nymphs are bathing in a pool of water when the mortal Actaeon happens upon the naked goddess. For offending the virgin deity, Actaeon was transformed into a
stag
Deer or true deer are hoofed ruminant mammals forming the family Cervidae. The two main groups of deer are the Cervinae, including the muntjac, the elk (wapiti), the red deer, and the fallow deer; and the Capreolinae, including the reindeer ...
to be hunted down by his own dogs. His fate is illustrated on the left side, where hounds chase a deer. The reverse (verso) shows the allegorical figure of Justice with two family coats of arms while holding a scale and a sword.
Gallery
File:Pontormo, natività del battista 01.jpg, Pontormo, verso c. 1526, ''Birth of John the Baptist''
File:Pontormo, natività del battista 02 retro.jpg, Heraldic verso of same
File:Firenze, cerchia di giovan battista franco, desco da parto con nascita di ercole, 1530-40 ca.JPG, 1530s, dish shape, with the ''Birth of Hercules''
File:Apollonio-giovanni-birth-tray-triumph-love-NG3898-fm.jpg, ''The Triumph of Love'', twelve-sided by Apollonio di Giovanni di Tommaso and Marco del Buono
Marco del Buono, also Marco del Buono Giamberti, (1402–1489) was an Italian painter and woodworker.
Life
Marco del Buono was documented in Florence as a member of the " Arte dei Medici e Speziali" Physicians' and Apothecaries’ Guild for ...
, (National Gallery, London
The National Gallery is an art museum in Trafalgar Square in the City of Westminster, in Central London, England. Founded in 1824, it houses a collection of over 2,300 paintings dating from the mid-13th century to 1900. The current Director o ...
)
File:Masaccio. Desco da parto - ca. 1420 - Gemäldegalerie, Berlin.jpg, Masaccio
Masaccio (, , ; December 21, 1401 – summer 1428), born Tommaso di Ser Giovanni di Simone, was a Florentine artist who is regarded as the first great Italian painter of the Quattrocento period of the Italian Renaissance. According to Vasari, ...
birth scene, c. 1420, diameter: 56.5 cm (22.2 in)
File:Masaccio. Desco da parto. Back side. ca. 1426. Berlin-Dahlem..jpg, Verso of the same
File:Ameto's Discovery of the Nymphs MET DP164807.jpg, Scene from Boccaccio's ''Commedia delle ninfe Fiorentine'', Ameto's Discovery of the Nymphs and Contest between the Shepherds Alcesto and Acaten, c. 1410
File:Master Taking of Tarento - Triumph of Venus (Louvre).jpeg, ''Triumph of Venus'', the worshippers are Achilles, Tristan, Lancelot
Lancelot du Lac (French for Lancelot of the Lake), also written as Launcelot and other variants (such as early German ''Lanzelet'', early French ''Lanselos'', early Welsh ''Lanslod Lak'', Italian ''Lancillotto'', Spanish ''Lanzarote del Lago' ...
, Samson, Paris and Troilus
Notes
References
*"Christie's"
Lot notes for "Giovanni di Ser Giovianni Guido, Scheggia (San Giovanni Valdarno 1406–1486 Florence), Desco da parto: Two boys at play" Lot 3, Sale 2534, 25 January 2012, Christie's New York, Rockefeller Plaza
*Musacchio, Jacqueline Marie, "The Medici–Tornabuoni Desco da Parto in Context", ''Metropolitan Museum Journal'' 33 (1998:137–151)
*"V&A"
"Renaissance childbirth" Victoria & Albert Museum
Further reading
*The recent monograph is Cecilia De Carli, ''I deschi da parto e la pittura del primo Rinascimento toscano'' Turin, 1997
*A. W. B. Randolph, "Gendering The Period Eye: Deschi Da Parto And Renaissance Visual Culture", ''Art History'', 27 (2004), pp. 538–62.
External links
City Review– Feature on 2009 exhibition ''Art and Love in Renaissance Italy'' (MMA New York and Fort Worth, Texas) – trays at the end.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Desco Da Parto
Renaissance art
Visual arts genres
Childbirth
History of Florence
Collections of the National Gallery, London
Women in Italy