chasse reliquary (3-D printed replica), Rajat Shanbhag

Artwork Overview

born 1990
chasse reliquary (3-D printed replica), 2017
Where object was made: Lawrence, Kansas, United States
Material/technique: plastic
Dimensions:
Object Height/Width/Depth (Height x Width x Depth): 16 x 14 x 5.5 cm
Object Height/Width/Depth (Height x Width x Depth): 6 5/16 x 5 1/2 x 2 3/16 in
Credit line: Gift of the artist
Accession number: C2017.076.01
Not on display

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Label texts

Brosseau Center for Learning: Disability Visibility: In Conversation with the 2022–2023 KU Common Book

In 2017, Spencer Museum interns commissioned these touchable replicas of artworks from the collection for the exhibition The Object Feels. The
3-D printed plastic reliquary is the same shape and size as the original. The beaded strip and ceramic vase are made from the same materials as the originals. Tactile replicas offer opportunity for multi-sensory encounters with art for multiple and diverse audiences.

Brosseau Center for Learning: The Object Feels

This church-shaped object is a 3D printed replica modeled after a reliquary, a container used to hold sacred items associated with a saint. Reliquaries typically occupied an important place in churches or cathedrals, typically behind the main altar or an altar in a side chapel. The original container, currently on display in the upstairs exhibition The Object Speaks, is made of gilt copper and is richly decorated with enamel and glass insets that could have originally been precious jewels. The gable ends are engraved with full-length standing figures (identified as saints) with blue circular enamel decorations in between. The top crest of the object is perforated with keyhole shaped openings that echo the lock below, which is intended to safeguard the holy objects contained inside the reliquary.

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