● On view now — Gallery 237
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
This powerful figure of Christ would have been placed at the center of an enameled and gilded cross to be carried in public processions. The sculptor, whose name is now unknown, probably derived the distinctive features of Christ, like his broad face and thick hair, from a well-known early 14th-century Tuscan Crucifixion, now lost. Even on a miniature scale, the tension of Christ’s body and his bowed head encourage an emotional response.
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Mosan; Meuse River Valley or German; Rhineland — Crucifix
Jacques de Baerze — Corpus of Christ, from the Altarpiece of
Florentine — Corpus and Superscription Plaque
Spanish — Corpus of Christ
Master of Santa Chiara (Italian) — Processional Cross
anonymous — Processiekruis van hout met zilver waarin gedrev
German or Austrian — Double-Sided Pendant Reliquary Cross
Southern Germany — Orphrey Cross (Needlework)
Probably German — Christ on the Cross with the Virgin and Sa
Giovanni Antonio da Pesaro — Crucifix
Spanish — Double-Sided Crucifix Pendant
German, probably Brunswick (Braunschweig) — Altar Cross