File:Tete de Saint Maurice Orleans.jpg
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Summary
DescriptionTete de Saint Maurice Orleans.jpg |
English: Old postcard, showing the photograph of the head of a saint's statue, discovered in 1827 in the ruins of the church of St-Maurice-St-Éloi in Orléans.
Often identified as the head of a statue of Saint-Maurice modelled after Jeanne d'Arc, but more likely the head of a statue of Saint George. The head is in polychrome stone, and of considerably high quality, most likely made in the late 15th or early 16th century (the style of the sallet belongs to the mid 15th century). The postcard was sold in the Musée de sculpture comparée (after 1937 Musée des monuments français), but the head is identified as being kept in the Musée d'Orléans (founded 1823, now Musée historique et archéologique de l'Orléanais) (or possibly the photograph is of a plaster cast of the original that was on exhibit in Paris?). Caption:
The idea that the head was modelled after Joan of Arc was very popular in 19th-century Romanticism, enthusiastically defended by Walter Scott, and still by Bernard Shaw, although it seems that the identification with Joan of Arc had come to be held untenable before 1900 (although it is still defended, at least on the Internet, today). Louis-Ernest Barrias (1841–1905) produced a clay sculpture of the head of Jeanne d'Arc based on the artefact (Petit Palais, musée des Beaux-arts de la Ville de Paris, inv. no. PPS1289). St-Éloi (or St-Éloi-St-Maurice) 14th-century parish church in Orléans (just west of Orléans cathedral ([1] 47°54′05″N 1°54′30″E / 47.9013°N 1.9083°E / 47.9013; 1.9083), formerly dedicated to Saint Maurice (but was re-dedicated to St Éloi in 1388[2]), for which reason the head was identified as a statue of that Saint. The argument was that, as St Maurice is usually depicted as a bearded moor, and this head is that of a clearly white young man (or woman, Walter Scott: "unquestionably the head of a girl of nineteen or so"), it stands to reason that it was directly modelled after St Joan. Modern art historians assume that it is not from a statue of St Maurice at all but rather from a statue of St George dating to the early 16th century. The church had been raided by Huguenots in 1567 and served as the seat of the guild of goldsmiths after that.[3] The head was discovered, apparently with fragments of the body, when the remains of a wall of the old church was torn down to make way for an extension of the sugar refinery of Louis-Auguste Pilté-Grenet (d. 1842, apparently a member of the Bande noire who had acquired the refinery from the Boislève family) on 19 November 1827.
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Date |
circa 1900 date QS:P,+1900-00-00T00:00:00Z/9,P1480,Q5727902 (photograph), c. 1500 (statue) |
Source | old postcard, c. 1900–1918 (photograph may be older, c. 1889–1900) |
Author | "ND" (either Étienne (1832-1918) or Louis-Antonin (1846-1914) Neurdein, Lévy et Neurdein réunis - 44 rue Letellier - Paris[5] |
Other versions | Other photographs: [6][7][8][9] |
Licensing
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse |
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https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/PDMCreative Commons Public Domain Mark 1.0falsefalse
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Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
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current | 10:55, 9 August 2016 | 705 × 1,078 (109 KB) | Dbachmann | ||
10:41, 9 August 2016 | 305 × 463 (51 KB) | Dbachmann | {{Information |Description ={{en|1=Head of a saint's statue, discovered in the rubble of the church of St-Maurice-St-Éloi in Orléans. Often identified as the head of a statue of Saint-Maurice modelled after Jeanne d'Arc, but more likely the head o... |
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JPEG file comment | Processed By eBay with ImageMagick, z1.1.0. ||B2 |
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