A Rare Liturgical Antique

Over twenty five years ago I stumbled upon these processional shields at a brocante, where an entire group of them appeared at once—rare enough that it immediately drew attention. I was not alone in recognizing that these were worth attention.

With limited means, I purchased as many as my pocketbook would allow, aware even then that I had come upon something exceptional, wishing I could buy more. Over time, I sold some, kept a few, and gifted others. In all the years since, I have never encountered others as authentic to the period as these.

Much later, while visiting a museum in Aix-en-Provence, I came upon a painting depicting a religious procession in which figures carried shields unmistakably like those I had found years before. In that moment, the intuition I had trusted at the brocante was confirmed. What I had was not merely a group of intriguing objects, but liturgical objects that once moved through streets by candlelight, within the rituals for which they were made.

An 18th-century hand-painted religious processional shield from Provence. Made to be carried during religious village processions rather than displayed in a church. The painted scene shows the Christ child being presented in the temple by his parents- an aged patina over time.

The shield has a fitted holder intended to support a candle, allowing the image to be illuminated during evening processions. On the reverse, there is a shaped hand grip for carrying the object directly, as well as a socket or attachment point that allowed it to be mounted on a staff or pole to be raised high during a procession. Very rare liturgical pieces



Comments

3 responses to “A Rare Liturgical Antique”

  1. Reading your blog is like visiting a lovely museum. The procession would have been so beautiful. I wonder if there would have been music and or singing?
    Thanks

  2. Thank you for sharing the photos and history of these fascinating items.

  3. Marilyn Miller

    What an amazing treasure. I know you treasure them.

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