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Articulated Christ - Italy, Lombardy 15th century
Articulated Christ - Italy, Lombardy 15th century - Religious Antiques Style Renaissance Articulated Christ - Italy, Lombardy 15th century - Articulated Christ - Italy, Lombardy 15th century - Renaissance Antiquités - Articulated Christ - Italy, Lombardy 15th century
Ref : 120873
80 000 €
Period :
11th to 15th century
Provenance :
Italy, Lombardia
Medium :
Polychrome wood
Dimensions :
l. 35.43 inch X H. 39.76 inch
Religious Antiques  - Articulated Christ - Italy, Lombardy 15th century 11th to 15th century - Articulated Christ - Italy, Lombardy 15th century Renaissance - Articulated Christ - Italy, Lombardy 15th century Antiquités - Articulated Christ - Italy, Lombardy 15th century
Galerie Alexandre Piatti

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Articulated Christ - Italy, Lombardy 15th century

A rare beauty, this polychrome wooden sculpture depicts Christ on the Cross in a representation imbued with emotional naturalism. It dates from the 16th century and is believed to have come from a workshop in Milan, Lombardy.

He is presented with a thin, suffering head in which his obvious pain remains contained, with a slightly wrinkled forehead and a tense jaw showing his torment. His half-open mouth suggests the last breaths he utters before dying. Both cheeks are hollowed out, with prominent, high cheekbones, while his carefully sculpted, half-closed eyes lend a masterly dramatic tension. The end of her face ends in a pointed chin that slides slightly forward. Her slightly tilted head, which falls lifelessly, accentuates the naturalism accorded to her.

His emaciated body reveals the tendons of his arms and legs folded in on themselves. On his protruding ribcage, we can make out his open wound and tense abdomen. Christ wears a perizonium on his hips. It is held in place by a knot on each side, which emerges at waist level. Pleated fabric covers half his thighs. The ends of his legs are curved forward and his feet are superimposed one on top of the other. The absence of hair and beard, revealing a bare head, suggests that it was probably originally adorned with real hair or horsehair, as was common practice at the time.

The articulated nature of this work gives it an exceptional singularity. Today, only around sixty examples exist, most of which are still in Italy. Its movable head and arms transform the figure of the Crucified One into a posed Christ, with his arms along his body, giving him the impression of being an ImagoPietatis. The latter is in an excellent state of preservation, with only a few missing parts to his fingers and a burn mark on his right arm, probably caused by a candle. This discreet mark echoes the rites and devotional uses to which the sculpture has been put over time. Its size suggests that it was intended for private devotion.

This type of sculpture stems from a tradition that developed in the Middle Ages during the 10th-11th centuries for popular devotion. Their use, often linked to religious brotherhoods, took place in the dramatized ceremonies of Holy Week. The use of polychrome wood enabled a naturalistic representation of Christ, making him more human to the faithful, so that they could identify with him and share in his sacrifice. This Christ no longer simply recreates the dramatic moment of his Passion, but becomes a mediating medium for the faithful. In this way, the faithful are no longer merely spectators, but actors, with an unprecedented level of emotional involvement during liturgies.

This sculpture can be attributed to Giovanni Angelo Del Maino, the greatest Renaissance woodcarver of the Duchy of Milan. Indeed, he produced a magnificent crucifix around 1505-1530 that bears many similarities to our own. Both works are part of the Lombardy tradition of religious statuary in polychrome wood, particularly vibrant at the turn of the 15th and 16th centuries. The Articulated Christ by Giovanni Angelo Del Maino is the pinnacle of this production, both in terms of the quality of its execution and its expressive intensity.

One of the most notable similarities between the two works is their articulated character. Stylistically, both Christs reveal a strong commitment to naturalism: the emaciated faces and anatomy reflect a desire to make Christ's physical and spiritual suffering perceptible. Giovanni Angelo Del Maino, in particular, excelled in articulating restrained expressivity and formal mastery, giving his works a subtle balance between pathos and sacred nobility, as seen in our sculpture. In both cases, we also note the absence of hair and beard, reinforcing their similarities. The drapery, with its dynamic folds, also illustrates a naturalistic treatment of fabric, reinforcing the illusion of movement and material verisimilitude.

Many other artists tried their hand at these articulatedChrists, one of the best-known examples of which is currently on display at the Met in New York. It features the same characteristics: articulated arms, a bare head and chin, and a perizodium surrounding Christ's hips.

This articulated Christ bears witness to exceptional craftsmanship, combining technical mastery, restrained expressiveness and spiritual intensity. Through its naturalism and liturgical function, it embodies a form of incarnated, participatory devotion. A rare and precious work, it follows in the footsteps of the greatest Lombard masters, and powerfully evokes the intimate link between art, faith and emotion.

Delevery information :

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Final amount including packing and shipment to be discussed with Galerie Alexandre Piatti.

Galerie Alexandre Piatti

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Religious Antiques