Lamentation of Christ
unknown
- Type
- sculpture
- Genre
- religious
- Plot
- Lamentation of Christ
- Provenance
- Collection of Lviv City Gallery
- Exposition
- Potocki Palace
The bronze high relief from the Gallery collection represents the traditional variant, where three figures are depicted from the waist up. In the centre, the body of Jesus, removed from the cross and draped in a loincloth (perizoma), is presented frontally. His head, adorned with a large crown of thorns, is turned to the left towards the Virgin Mary, depicted in profile. A maphorion covers Mary's head and shoulders. Her lips opened in a mournful cry, and she gently touched the cheek of her dead son. With her right hand, she tenderly holds Christ's palm, marked by the nail wound. Jesus' left arm hangs unwillingly along his body. On his right side is depicted the wound inflicted by the lance of the Roman soldier Longinus. On the opposite side of the Savior, the artist placed the figure of John the Evangelist. With his hands, he supports Christ's body at the waist. The Apostle, overwhelmed with grief, turns his face away. Characteristic are the thick locks of hair that frame his face. The work was likely created in Northwestern Europe, possibly in Germany, where it was traditional to depict the crown of thorns as large and voluminous, sometimes disproportionately about the size of the head. In creating the high relief, the author was inspired by the "Pietà" (c. 1460, National Pinacoteca di Brera in Milan) by the Venetian artist Giovanni Bellini (1430–1516), who was a founder of the Venetian School of Painting.