Crucifix

Unknown Italian, Italian

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16th century

Gilt copper

Overall: 11 7/8 × 9 7/16 × 1 5/16 in. (30.2 × 23.9 × 3.3 cm)

Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth: Collection of Roger Arvid Anderson, Class of 1968

EL.S.993.19.77

Geography

Place Made: Italy, Europe

Period

1400-1600

Object Name

Sculpture

Research Area

Sculpture

On view

Inscriptions

none

Label

The image of Jesus on the cross is central to Christian worship and prompts viewers to consider his ultimate sacrifice for the salvation of humanity. Made centuries apart, these crucifixes use valuable metals to suggest both the divinity and the preciousness of Christ. Each gives dimensionality to Christ’s emaciated body, prompting the viewer to imagine the physical pain and suffering of his death. The three crosses would have been part of composite objects with larger roles in religious practice. The Limoges cross may have been affixed to a pyx, a box for consecrated wafers, while the largest cross has a notch where it was elevated on a staff to be carried in processions. Meanwhile, the fully three-dimensional body of Christ was once nailed to a cross, perhaps for private devotional use.

From the 2024 exhibition Living with Sculpture: Presence and Power in Europe, 1400–1750, curated by Elizabeth Rice Mattison, Andrew W. Mellon Curator of Academic Programming and Curator of European Art, and Ashley B. Offill, Curator of Collections

Course History

HIST 96.39, Saints and Material Devotion, Cecilia Gaposchkin, Fall 2021

ARTH 27.02, Living Stone: Sculpture in Early Modern Italy, Elizabeth Kassler-Taub, Winter 2022

HIST 7.19, Medieval Paris, M. Cecilia Gaposchkin, Spring 2022

HIST 43.02, European Intellectual History 1400-1800, Darrin McMahon, Fall 2022

History 3.01, Europe in the Age of Wonder, M. Cecilia Gaposchkin and Walter Simons, Winter 2023

History 42.01, Women's Gender, and Sexuality Studies 22.01, Gender & European Society, Patrick Meehan, Spring 2024

History 96.39, Saints and Relics, Cecilia Gaposchkin, Spring 2024

Italian 1.01, Introductory Italian I, Noemi Perego, Spring 2024

Italian 11.01, Intensive Italian, Floriana Ciniglia, Spring 2024

Italian 2.01, Introductory Italian II, Floriana Ciniglia, Spring 2024

Italian 3.01, Introductory Italian III, Tania Convertini, Spring 2024

Italian 3.02, Introductory Italian III, Giorgio Alberti, Spring 2024

Exhibition History

European Bronzes from the Collection of Roger Arvid Anderson, Class of 1968, Gene Y. Kim, Class of 1985, Gallery, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, January 19, 1996-June 22, 1997, no. 37.

Living with Sculpture: Presence and Power in Europe, 1400–1750, Citrin Family Gallery and Engles Family Gallery, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, March 23, 2024–March 22, 2025.

Publication History

Roger Arvid Anderson, The Roger Arvid Anderson Collection, Medals, Medallions, Plaquettes and Small Reliefs, Paintings, Sculpture, Works on Paper and Textiles, San Francisco: Roger Arvid Anderson (published privately), design by David L. Wilson, 2015, p. 264-265.

Provenance

Peter Silverman, Paris; RIchard Trescott, London; sold to Roger Arvid Anderson, San Francisco, California, March 1991; lent to present collection, 1993.

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