Coin Cabinet for a Member of the Barberini Family
Italian; Rome
- Maker
- Italian; Rome
- Date
- 1630–34
- Medium
- Cypress, poplar, paint, silk, velvet, iron, bronze, and gilding
- Dimensions
- 91.8 × 67.4 × 46.7 cm (36 1/8 × 26 1/2 × 18 3/8 in.)
- Form
- Case Piece
- Origin
- Italy
- Museum
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Accession
- 1966.92
- Credit line
- Woods Charitable Fund
This cabinet was likely once part of the furnishings of the celebrated library and study in the palazzo of Pope Urban VIII's nephew, Cardinal Francesco Barberini. The library was renowned not only for its books, but for its collection of ancient coins, medals, and gems. Designed as a piece of architecture—a temple in miniature—this coin cabinet must have originally sat on a table or credenza with its back flat against a wall. The base, meant to mimic steps, forms two tiers of drawers, while the center has a pull-down, hinged panel carved and painted with the coat of arms of the Barberini (three bees). When this panel is open it reveals a stack of fourteen pull-out trays, each fitted with a pattern of circular and oval cavities, and lined with silk and velvet in vibrant colors including red, black, yellow, green, and purple. Though now empty, these trays and other hidden drawers in the entablature and superstructure above would have held rare coins and medals collected for the delight and interest of the Barberini family as well as for the study and contemplation of their distinguished guests, nobles and visiting scholars who were welcomed to the library.