Leg-Vise
Culture
German
, or
Cultureperhaps
Italian
Date1600s
Mediumwrought iron with chiseled decoration
Dimensions86 × 18 × 53 cm (33 7/8 × 7 1/16 × 20 7/8 in.)
ClassificationsUtilitarian Objects
Credit LineThe John Woodman Higgins Armory Collection
Object number2014.1033
DescriptionConsisting of 2 jaws of very heavy stock, the forward one hinging at its base on the rear one, and having a face worked into the iron just below the level of the grip. The rear jaw has a spiked lower end, bent backwards at a right angle so that it rests on the floor (this is likely a post-working life modification to save damage to the floor). Behind the face the screw passes through both jaws, projecting behind the rear one to accommodate the eye of the arm. The arm is of curving round stock, terminating in a heavy hexagonal nut for rotating the screw, the nut being adorned with decorative moldings. The final component is the decorative plate, which shackles the upper part of the rear jaw to its securing point.Arm seems to have broken and been repaired, likely during working life.
Main vise 114.5 lb; arm 13 lb; shackle 13 lb. Total weight 136.5 lb.
ProvenanceReinhold-Kirsch, Munich, by 1928 Sold to the Brummer Gallery [object inventory card no. P5722], New York, NY, September 12, 1928 Sold to Elie Nardelman, New York, NY, June 12, 1929. Sumner Healey, New York, by 1931 Sold to the Higgins Armory Museum, Worcester, MA, December 31, 1931 Collection transfer from the Higgins Armory to the Worcester Art Museum, January 2014.
On View
Not on viewlate 1700s-early 1800s
Michel Witz the Younger
1530s