Visiting The Met? The Temple of Dendur will be closed Sunday, April 27 through Friday, May 9. The Met Fifth Avenue will be closed Monday, May 5.

Learn more

Late Medieval German Sculpture: Images for the Cult and for Private Devotion

The destruction of religious images during the Protestant Reformation, along with neglect, changes in taste, fire, and the secularization of ecclesiastic institutions account for this loss.
A slider containing 3 items.
Press the down key to skip to the last item.
The Road to Calvary, Master of the Lorsch Calvary, Alabaster, German
Master of the Lorsch Calvary
ca. 1440
Bust of the Virgin, Terracotta with paint, Bohemian
Bohemian
ca. 1390–95
Pietà (Vesperbild), Limestone with polychrome highlight, Bohemian
Bohemian
ca. 1400

The Carved Altarpiece
Although in great demand in Central Europe in the late fifteenth to early sixteenth century, very few carved altarpieces have survived intact. The destruction of religious images during the Protestant Reformation, along with neglect, changes in taste, fire, and the secularization of ecclesiastic institutions account for this loss. Many figures and reliefs in museum collections are merely fragments of elaborate, monstrance-like structures, which served as a focus for liturgy, veneration, and pilgrimage.

The altarpiece, which traditionally combined sculpted figures with an architectural encasement, consisted of four main elements. The central section, or corpus, housed figures arranged either side by side or in a unified composition. It was flanked by hinged wings, decorated with reliefs, which were open on Sundays and most holy days. The predella, or base, which often contained sculpture, raised the corpus above the altar and gave it greater prominence. A tall superstructure with intricate tracery and additional figures surmounted the corpus. Retables were costly undertakings that often resulted from the collaboration of several individuals: a sculptor, a joiner, an ironmonger, and, in the case of a polychrome altarpiece, a painter.

Images for Private Devotion
By 1300 emerged a form of spirituality that emphasized the emotional involvement of the faithful. Believers were encouraged to contemplate events from the life of Christ, the Virgin, or the saints, as if they had been present at such events. Besides attending the celebration of the Eucharist at church, the devout were expected to retire for prayer several times a day to a private chapel, monastic cell, or simply a corner of one’s home. Images, usually modest in scale, helped in these meditations, since they made tangible the object of prayer. Reflecting the wealth and rank of the individual owner, they were produced in every medium, from paper to gold. The rapport with the image was an intimate one: typically kneeling, the devout recited prayers while gazing at the image, and could light candles in front of it, caress it, and kiss it. Groups of the Virgin and Child and scenes from Christ’s Passion (); () were among the most popular images for private devotion. A sculptor’s attention to detail and the corporeality of his figures increased the immediacy of the image as a focus of veneration.


Contributors

Julien Chapuis
Department of Medieval Art and The Cloisters, The Metropolitan Museum of Art

October 2002


Further Reading

Gothic and Renaissance Art in Nuremberg, 1300–1550. Exhibition catalogue.. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1986. See on MetPublications

Baxandall, Michael. The Limewood Sculptors of Renaissance Germany. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1980.

Chapuis, Julien. Tilman Riemenschneider: Master Sculptor of the Late Middle Ages. Exhibition catalogue.. Washington, D.C.: The National Gallery of Art, 1999.


Citation

View Citations

Chapuis, Julien. “Late Medieval German Sculpture: Images for the Cult and for Private Devotion.” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/grmn_4/hd_grmn_4.htm (October 2002)