The Dead Christ with two angels thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Cast Courts, Room 46b, The Weston Cast Court

The Dead Christ with two angels

Relief
1447-1449 (sculpted), ca. 1884 (cast)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Plaster cast of a bronze relief of Dead Christ Lamented by two angels.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleThe Dead Christ with two angels (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Plaster cast, painted plaster
Brief description
Plaster cast, painted plaster, after bronze, partly gilded relief of Dead Christ with two angels from the high altar of the Basilica of St Anthony of Padua, at Padua, by Donatello in Padua, 1447-9. Cast by Signor Tombola in Venice, in about 1884.
Physical description
Plaster cast of a bronze relief of Dead Christ Lamented by two angels.
Dimensions
  • Height: 61.5cm
  • Width: 122cm
Gallery label
Donatello was commissioned to create an altar for the basilica in Padua. It was later dismantled. This expressive and emotive scene may have been the centrepiece. Other reproductions displayed in this case show more elements from Donatello’s altar design. Painted to look like the original bronze, the casts were made in the 19th century, when Donatello’s work was popular.(2014)
Object history
Purchased from Signor Tombola in 1884 for £1 7s 6d
Historical context
In the present, incorrect reconstruction of the altar, dating from 1895, the relief of the Dead Christ is placed centrally, on the front of the altar, flanked by eight angel reliefs. It is now generally agreed that this relief might have occupied the same position, but would have been flanked by two bronze reliefs showing miracles performed by St Anthony of Padua, with or without the intervention of two angel reliefs.

On 13 April 1446, a donation of 15,000 lire was accepted from a Paduan citizen, Francesco da Tergola, for the construction of the high altar of the Santo. The first payment to Donatello for the new altar occurs in February 1447. Although the altar was temporarily erected for the feast of St Anthony (June 13) 1448, and most of the major figures were cast by 1450, the project was still unfinished when Donatello left Padua in 1454.

The altar originally stood at the end of the choir, close to the ambulatory, but was dismembered in 1579, when officials of the Arca decided to replace it with a larger structure, designed by Girolamo Campagna and Cesare Fianco. Although most of Donatello's sculptures were incorporated into the new altar by 1582, it was not until 1895 that all the surviving components were united in the present fanciful reconstruction by Camillo Boito. The original form of the altar remains controversial, due to the loss of almost all the original architectural elements, except for a pair of volutes (item 8 below).

The surviving components of the original altar are:
Preserved on the altar in the Basilica di Sant'Antonio:
1.Seven bronze figures in the round, comprising, the Virgin and Child enthroned, St Francis (V&A cast no. 1899-56), St Anthony of Padua, St Louis of Toulouse, St Daniel, St Justina, St Prosdocimus.
2.Four bronze reliefs depicting miracles performed by St Anthony of Padua (V&A cast nos. 1884-325 to 328).
3.Four bronze reliefs containing Symbols of the Evangelists.
4.Twelve bronze reliefs of angels (V&A cast nos. 1870-18 and 18 a-k).
5.A bronze relief of the Dead Christ Lamented by Two Angels (V&A cast no. 1884-329).
6.A limestone relief depicting the Entombment.
7.A bronze relief of the Dead Christ with seven angels, by an unidentified Venetian sculptor (V&A cast no 1884-330).

In the Museo Antoniano, Padua:-
8.A pair of volutes, thought to have come from the canopy which once surmounted the altar.

In the Museo Salvatore, Romano, Florence:-
9.Marble reliefs depicting the half-length figures of St Prosdocimus and another saint, possibly two of the four half-length saints seen by Marcantonio Michiel on the back of the altar, in the early 16th century.
Subjects depicted
Collection
Accession number
REPRO.1884-329

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Record createdJune 29, 2000
Record URL
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