Drawing of a stylized plants probably taken from a fifteenth century tapestry and made for the stained glass The Legend of Good Women project. Head of a Crozier with Saint Michael Slaying the Dragon 1220–30 Metropolitan Museum, New York Accession Number: 17.190.834a, b Provenance: Georges Hoentschel (French); J. Pierpont Morgan (American), London and New York (until 1917) Hoentschel was an interior decorator and a collector of medieval and eighteenth-century decorative art. Like his close friend Jean Carriès, he designed Art Nouveau ceramics and was the architect of the pavilion of the Union Centrale des Arts Décoratifs at the 1900 Paris Exposition Universelle. (Metropolitan Museum, New York) There are a number of croziers existing with St Michael slaying the Dragon at the head, but the drawing here is closest to that example held in the Metropolitan Museum, New York, which was acquired by J. Pierpont Morgan and was presented to the Museum, Burne-Jones may have seen this on his trip to Paris in 1862, as the Hoentschel collection had a considerable reputation at the time.