Not currently on display at the V&A

The Scourging of Christ

Relief
late 16th century (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This stucco relief is cast from one of the reliefs executed by Giambologna for the church of Santissima Annunziata in Florence. The relief shows Christ with his back to a pillar, bound and held by two executioners and scourged by two others. There are groups of seated and standing spectators appear to left and right and between the arches. The heads of Christ and several of the spectators are missing.

Born in Flanders Giovanni Bologna (1524-1608), or short Giambologna went to Rome to study antique sculpture from about 1550 to 1553. He then travelled through Florence where he was persuaded to stay. He became sculptor to the Medici family and thus became one of the most influential sculptors of the late 16th and early 17th centuries. For half a century Giambologna dominated Florentine sculpture, carving an ever more impressive series of statue groups in marble: Samson Slaying a Philistine (1560–62), Florence Triumphant over Pisa (1563–75), the Rape of a Sabine (1582), Hercules Slaying a Centaur (1595–1600). In addition, Giambologna produced several extraordinary bronze statues. By ca. 1570 Giambologna had become the most influential sculptor in Europe. Apart from the fame that his monumental statues in Florence inevitably brought, his style was disseminated in the form of small bronze reproductions of his masterworks, or statuettes, which he composed independently as elegant ornaments for the interior. These were used by the Medici as diplomatic gifts for friendly heads of state, and were also eagerly purchased by European collectors as examples of sophisticated Florentine design. They were especially favoured in Germany and the Low Countries and were prominently illustrated in paintings of fashionable gallery interiors there. For compositional subtlety, sensuous tactile values and sheer technical virtuosity, Giambologna’s work is virtually unequalled in any period or country.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleThe Scourging of Christ (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Stucco cast
Brief description
Relief, stucco cast, The Scourging of Christ, after Giambologna, Italy (Florence), probably late 16th century
Physical description
Relief in stucco. Christ with his back to a pillar, bound and held by two executioners and scourged by two others. Groups of seated and standing spectators appear to left and right and between the arches. The surface of the relief is painted brown. The heads of Christ, of the executioner on the right and of three of the four spectators have been broken off. Cast of one of the reliefs executed by Giambologna for the church of Santissima Annunziata, Florence.
Dimensions
  • Height: 48.3cm
  • Length: 29in
  • Width: 73.7cm
Object history
Purchased in London by J.C Robinson. Previously in the possession of a London dealer, Pinti, who had purchased both reliefs in Italy.
Subjects depicted
Summary
This stucco relief is cast from one of the reliefs executed by Giambologna for the church of Santissima Annunziata in Florence. The relief shows Christ with his back to a pillar, bound and held by two executioners and scourged by two others. There are groups of seated and standing spectators appear to left and right and between the arches. The heads of Christ and several of the spectators are missing.

Born in Flanders Giovanni Bologna (1524-1608), or short Giambologna went to Rome to study antique sculpture from about 1550 to 1553. He then travelled through Florence where he was persuaded to stay. He became sculptor to the Medici family and thus became one of the most influential sculptors of the late 16th and early 17th centuries. For half a century Giambologna dominated Florentine sculpture, carving an ever more impressive series of statue groups in marble: Samson Slaying a Philistine (1560–62), Florence Triumphant over Pisa (1563–75), the Rape of a Sabine (1582), Hercules Slaying a Centaur (1595–1600). In addition, Giambologna produced several extraordinary bronze statues. By ca. 1570 Giambologna had become the most influential sculptor in Europe. Apart from the fame that his monumental statues in Florence inevitably brought, his style was disseminated in the form of small bronze reproductions of his masterworks, or statuettes, which he composed independently as elegant ornaments for the interior. These were used by the Medici as diplomatic gifts for friendly heads of state, and were also eagerly purchased by European collectors as examples of sophisticated Florentine design. They were especially favoured in Germany and the Low Countries and were prominently illustrated in paintings of fashionable gallery interiors there. For compositional subtlety, sensuous tactile values and sheer technical virtuosity, Giambologna’s work is virtually unequalled in any period or country.
Associated objects
Bibliographic references
  • List of Objects in the Art Division, South Kensington Museum acquired during the Year 1880. London, 1881, p. 6
  • MacLagan, E, and Longhurst, Margaret, H. Catalogue of Italian Sculpture. London: V&A, 1932, p. 148
  • Pope-Hennessy, John. Catalogue of Italian Sculpture in the Victoria and Albert Museum. London: Her Majesty's Stationary Office, 1964, p. 475
  • Weihrauch. Die Bildwerke in Bronze und in anderen Metallen. Munich: Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, 1956, p. 92
Collection
Accession number
77-1880

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Record createdJuly 14, 2008
Record URL
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