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Detail of the Christ Child with Apple in the Cloisters, October 2017


Christ Child with an Apple
Artist:Circle of Michel Erhart (German, Ulm, active 1464–1522)
Date: ca. 1470–80
Geography:Made in Ulm, Germany
Culture:German
Medium:Willow with original paint and traces of gold
Dimensions:14 15/16 x 7 1/2 x 4 3/4 in. (38 x 19.1 x 12.1 cm)
Classification:Sculpture-Wood
Credit Line:The Cloisters Collection, 2012
Accession Number:2012.449
The engaging curly-haired Christ Child stands with welcoming open arms as he holds a red apple in his right hand. In the late Middle Ages, such images often were the focus of altar decoration at Christmas, and documents reveal that nuns frequently were given such sculptures by their families upon taking monastic vows. The painted flesh tones of this example are extraordinarily well preserved. The sculpture is carved from the same piece of willow; only the green turf on which the figure stands has been largely repainted, and the hair has lost its gilding.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/479673
Artist:Circle of Michel Erhart (German, Ulm, active 1464–1522)
Date: ca. 1470–80
Geography:Made in Ulm, Germany
Culture:German
Medium:Willow with original paint and traces of gold
Dimensions:14 15/16 x 7 1/2 x 4 3/4 in. (38 x 19.1 x 12.1 cm)
Classification:Sculpture-Wood
Credit Line:The Cloisters Collection, 2012
Accession Number:2012.449
The engaging curly-haired Christ Child stands with welcoming open arms as he holds a red apple in his right hand. In the late Middle Ages, such images often were the focus of altar decoration at Christmas, and documents reveal that nuns frequently were given such sculptures by their families upon taking monastic vows. The painted flesh tones of this example are extraordinarily well preserved. The sculpture is carved from the same piece of willow; only the green turf on which the figure stands has been largely repainted, and the hair has lost its gilding.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/479673
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