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Exhibitions and Projects
Revelations | 7 Mar. 2024 – 3 Apr. 2024

Revelations: The Crucifix from Dramlje

The Hitherto Overlooked Aesthetics of Veit Stoss

A wooden body of Christ is large (176 × 210 × 30 cm) and on display in the Exhibition Hall 1 of the Permanent Collection of the National Gallery of Slovenia. Its remarkable and expressive outlook is a consequence of improper use before its arrival at the National Gallery; the wood has been stripped of paint, with only modest fragments remaining. In the exhibition catalogue Gothic Sculpture in Slovenia (1973), Emilijan Cevc wrote: "It seems that the Crucifix hung outdoors for a long time, probably on a cemetery cross, where it was beaten by the weather. Its original place may have been in the triumphal arch of a church nave."

A close inspection of the sculpture quickly reveals a series of small details that almost nullify the impression of expressiveness and lead the observer to admire the silent sadness emanating from the tortured body of the Crucified One in his last sighs.

 If we manage to ignore the damage done to the wooden plastic by the ravages of time, we realise that we are looking at a beautifully constructed male body, almost a nude, with only a tightly wrapped loincloth covering the groin. The body is drawn out. The knees are straight, the right leg is nailed on top of the left. The arms are almost horizontal and tense. The solidly built rib cage shows a rib arch and the torso tapers noticeably at the waist. The small head is inclined to the right and slightly bent forward; a tuft of heavily curled hair falls on the right shoulder. The expressive facial features are finely modelled and detailed, the eyes are almost closed, the mouth slightly open. The carver paid great attention not only to the hair but also to the chin and moustache, the latter are absent above the upper lip. The fragile crown of thorns is preserved only in fragments. The whole surface of the body is life-like, since we can see the skeleton, muscles, tendons and veins under the skin and wrinkles and folds on the surface, e.g. around the eyes, on the forehead, on the left hand, around the knees, above the right heel, etc.

The Master was skilled in his trade: he followed the natural look of the human body and at the same time achieved the degree of stylisation necessary to preserve the beauty of the corpus of the Son of God, which was in keeping with the canon of the time. Albrecht Dürer (Nuremberg, 1471–1528), a contemporary of the carver of the Crucifix wrote in the draft introduction to his painting manual that the ancient world considered Apollo to be the ideal of beauty, while for his contemporaries the image of the body of Christ was held up as the most beautiful. Undoubtedly, the author of The Crucifix from Dramlje followed this mind-set and aspiration, which he managed to translate into a virtuoso artistic carving.

For a long time, Slovenian art history considered this sculpture to be the work of a local (Carniolan) master, and it was supposedly created between 1500 and 1520. It was not until 2016 that Andrej Smrekar suggested the work might be an import from the South German area, centring its creation around 1515.

The latter has proved to be the case. In reviewing the great crucifixes in Bavaria, attention was drawn to a series of large-scale crucifixes by the famous Swabian sculptor Veit Stoss (Horb am Neckar, 1477–1533, Nuremberg). The master made several large wooden crucifixes for churches and chapels in Nuremberg, and almost identical works by the same master can also be found in Kraków (St Mary's Basilica) and in its surrounding area (Iwanowice), as well as in Florence (Ognissanti). They measure between 147 and 207 cm in height and 154 and 199 cm in width. They are all drawn-out figures, with arms almost horizontal and outstretched. All of them have their heads lolling to the right side, where, without exception, a lock of curly hair descends. The skin covers taut muscles, sinews and veins and does not conceal skeletal forms. In all cases, the right leg is nailed to the left one. The facial features are almost identical in all versions; the carefully groomed beard and moustache follow the same patterns. Today, the crown of thorns varies not only in design but also in preservation. The carver dared to change only in the design of the loincloth, which was not bound to the canon. In some cases it fits tightly (perhaps also because of the finely shaped swirled drapery parts that were later broken off), but in others it is richer both in the amount of fabric and in the many artistically tied knots and/or fancifully swirling, plastic finials that project outwards.

With these features in mind, Stoss' carving is undoubtedly also recognisable in The Crucifix from Dramlje. Our specimen is close in formal characteristics to the Crucifix in the Germanisches Nationalmuseum (1505–1510) as well as this in the Nuremberg Church of St Lawrence (1516‒1520). The design of the loincloth is almost identical to that on a miniature carved Crucifix (34.5 × 33 ×6.5 cm) by the same artist, which was intended for personal devotion and has been part of the collection of the Getty Museum in Los Angeles since 2019 (1510–1515).

Author 
Mojca Jenko 

Presented: Thursday, 7 March, 6 p.m.

7 March – 3 April 2024
National Gallery of Slovenia
Prešernova 24
1000 Ljubljana