1646/9
South America
Object qualities
-
Objectreligious artefact: Monstrance
-
Author of the objectDiego de Atienza
-
Type of arts & crafts
-
MediumSilver gilt with enamel, cast, chased, and engraved
-
SizeHeight: 22 1/2 in. (57.2 cm)
-
Geography details
South America -
Country today
-
Date1646/9
Source of information
-
Type of sourceDatabase “Metropolitan Museum of Art”
-
Fund that the source refers toMetropolitan Museum of Art
Description
-
The inscription indicates that this monstrance was made for Pedro de Urraca, a Spanish-born Mercedarian friar who spent most of his life in Ecuador and Peru, where he was revered for the holiness of his ministry. Urraca probably commissioned the monstrance from Atienzia as a gift to his native parish of Jadraque in Guadalajara, Spain. Such donations are responsible for the presence of much New World silver in Spanish churches.
Although the monstrance stem conforms to the “Severe” style of silver in early seventeenth-century Spain, the elaborate composition of the sol anticipates the distinctive development of the form in Peru.