Artwork
Armorial Roundel

Armorial Roundel is an unspecified painting. It dates from 1500 and is held in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The work is a circular painted composition framed by a thin black rim.
About this work
Overview
The work is a circular painted composition framed by a thin black rim. Its central field is a bright yellow disc bearing a heraldic shield, while the surrounding area is white, intersected by a subtle grid of fine black lines that give the surface a restrained structure.
Subject & Meaning
At the heart of the piece lies a coat of arms, rendered in yellow and embellished with stylized floral and foliate motifs. The decorative elements suggest a reference to lineage or identity, presented in a simplified, ornamental manner rather than a narrative scene.
Technique & Style
The artist employs flat areas of color—yellow, white, and black—combined with geometric patterning. The design relies on clear outlines and a limited palette, creating a balanced visual rhythm between the central emblem and the surrounding grid and decorative shapes.
History & Provenance
The roundel’s format and heraldic content indicate a possible function as a decorative panel or emblematic object, though specific details of its creation, date, or ownership are not recorded in the available information.
Context
Circular formats have historically been used for seals, medals, and ornamental panels, often to convey authority or affiliation. The inclusion of a coat of arms within such a shape aligns the work with these traditions, while the abstracted decorative treatment reflects a modernist simplification of heraldic imagery.
Artist & collection










