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Wednesday, December 3, 2025 |
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| Saint Christopher Carrying the Christ Child at NG |
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WASHINGTON, D.C.- A bronze St. Christopher statuette whose travels constitute a classic tale of loss, mistaken identity, and reunion is currently on view in the new Sculpture Galleries of the National Gallery of Art, on loan from the Louvre. Saint Christopher Carrying the Christ Child with the Globe of the World (c. 1500/1509) by Severo Calzetta da Ravenna consists of two small Renaissance bronzes, a nearly eleven-inch Saint Christopher that belongs to the Louvre, and a three-and-five-eighths-inch Christ Child that belongs to the National Gallery of Art’s Samuel H. Kress Collection, one of the world’s great collections of Renaissance bronzes.
The two bronzes were 3,800 miles apart until 1970, when a young Louvre curator named Bertrand Jestaz became intrigued by a figure called "Boy with a Ball" while studying the Kress Collection at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. The boy’s posture suggested he had been seated on something, and his distinctive drapery was similar to that of a statue thought to be an "Atlas" or "Hercules" at the Louvre. When Jestaz asked that the boy be removed from its base, a small prong was found whose measurements seemed to be a match for a threaded hole in the upraised palm of the "Atlas."
National Gallery of Art curator Douglas Lewis took the bronze boy to Paris in September 1970. To the delight of the art world, the figure fit right into his perch on "Atlas’s" hand. In December 1970 both statues were brought to the U.S. for technical testing at the Winterthur Museum in Delaware, where they were found to be cast from an identical alloy, unquestionably in the same workshop at the same time. The bronzes were probably separated during the dispersal of a later private collection.
Together, the pair are now recognized as a depiction of the story of the traditional patron of travelers, Saint Christopher, carrying Jesus across a river. According to the apocryphal legend, Christopher was a ferryman who agreed to carry a small boy across a river on his back. As he went further his burden grew heavier, until when he reached the other side his passenger revealed himself as the Christ Child, with his burden of the whole world. The pair are considered an anomaly in art history, because Saint Christopher is usually depicted carrying the Christ Child either on a shoulder or on his back, rather than balanced on a raised hand. The composition of this group allows the two to gaze intently into each other’s faces, as the child blesses the ferryman.
Rechristened Saint Christopher Carrying the Christ Child with the Globe of the World, the statuette was exhibited briefly at the National Gallery of Art in 1971. The attribution of the statuette was also changed, from Bartolomeo Bellano (1434-1496-97) to Severo Calzetta da Ravenna, a slightly younger Paduan artist (active 1496-1525/1538). Since 1973 the two bronzes have been together at the Louvre, save for a brief visit back to the National Gallery of Art in 1985. This year’s journey brings them back in celebration of the new Sculpture Galleries in the West Building, where they will be on view in Gallery 14 until April 2004.
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Today's News
December 3, 2025
The Met unveils first major U.S. exhibition of Finnish master Helene Schjerfbeck
National Gallery's Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts announces new publication, Art &
Morphy's Dec. 10-11 Fine & Decorative Arts Auction ushers in the holidays with exquisite jewels, luxury goods, antiques
Yale University Art Gallery unveils first volume of landmark Italian paintings catalogue
The Gala-Salvador Dalí Foundation announces the launch of Platform Dalí
Clark Art Institute names Lara Yeager-Crasselt as the inaugural Curator of its Aso O. Tavitian Collection
The Winter Egg by Fabergé realises £22,895,000
Louisiana Museum of Modern Art presents 137 new works
Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten appoints Laurence Rassel as new director
Mario Ayala explores identity and car culture in major Houston exhibition
From Jordan and Kobe to Mantle and Ohtani: Heritage's Winter Auction showcases the greatest legends in sports collecting
Clyfford Still Museum debuts exhibition curated by Children of the Colville Confederated Tribes
Blaffer Art Museum unveils Soledad Salamé's first U.S. solo museum exhibition, Camouflage
Musée cantonal des Beaux-Arts de Lausanne presents its 2026 programme
Teresa Margolles confronts violence and memory in major retrospective at MARCO
EMMA celebrates its 20th anniversary in 2026 - programme announced
Ludwig Museum explores Taiwan's identity, history, and future in major multithemed exhibition
Exhibition at Antichità Alberto Di Castro traces Pavel Pepperstein's artistic journey from 1978 to today
National Asian Culture Center presents tenth-anniversary exhibition Manifesto of Spring
Raffaella della Olga transforms the typewriter into art in new Clark exhibition
Academy Art Museum to break ground on Henny and James Freeman Annex and Hormel Research Center
"Non-existent" coin worth $3-5 million, to be auctioned
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