On view
East-West Artwalk
Haskell Education Center
Haskell Education Center
Corpus for a crucifix,
13th century
French
y1951-26
Bronze corpora, sculpted bodies of the crucified Christ, survive in large numbers. They were made to attach to the crosses that stood on Roman Catholic altars or were carried in procession. Corpora were preserved, even after they had been detached from their crosses, because they were valued as sacred images. The selection here includes earlier examples depicting the Triumphant Christ upright on the cross, standing on a platform, and crowned as victorious over death. Later images represent Christ suffering, as the Passion (Jesus’s torture and death) was emphasized as part of an effort to make Biblical events more immediate for worshipers.
Information
Title
Corpus for a crucifix
Dates
13th century
Medium
Copper with gilding and champlevé enamel
Dimensions
17.4 × 14 × 2 cm (6 7/8 × 5 1/2 × 13/16 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Russell C. Veit, Class of 1906
Object Number
y1951-26
Place Made
Europe, France, Limoges
Culture
Type
Russell C. Veit (1883-1957); gift to the Princeton University Art Museum, 1951.