● On view now — Gallery 205
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Opus sectile , or the art of inlaying stones, was a form of ancient Roman decoration revived during the 16th century in Milan, Rome, and Florence. It was employed for the decoration of tabletops, cabinets, and other ecclesiastical and secular furnishings, and it combined marbles with hard stones like agate, which were much more difficult to cut, to form abstract patterns or images. This plaque would have been a small devotional object for a wealthy household and was probably made in Rome during the last quarter of the 16th century, when there was a revival of such decoration.
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Circle of Jacopo Sansovino — The Institution of the Rosary
C. Luigi Valadier — Crucifixion of Saint Peter
Joseph Moser — Monstrance
England — Shadow Box with Coat of Arms
Unknown Artist
American or English, 19th century — Friendshi
Spanish — Double-Sided Pendant with the Presentation in the
Alessandro Masnago — Pendant with a Cameo of Orpheus Charmin
Spanish — Double-Sided Pendant with Symbols of Christ and th
Johannes de Nusco — Monstrance
South German — Cover of a Reliquary Container with the Virgi
Wedgwood Manufactory — Buckle
France — Bag