About this item
Highlights
- Tells the intriguing story of the search for, and discovery of, wonderful, rare silver-gilt religious vessels thought lost for centuries.In 1767 and 1768, a number of objects made by renowned eighteenth-century Roman goldsmith Luigi Valadier (1726-1785) were sent from Rome to an unnamed "principal church in Mexico," among them a monstrance (a vessel in which the consecrated Host is shown).
- About the Author: Xavier F. Salomon is the deputy director and Peter Jay Sharp Chief Curator, The Frick Collection, New York.
- 224 Pages
- Art, History
Description
Book Synopsis
Tells the intriguing story of the search for, and discovery of, wonderful, rare silver-gilt religious vessels thought lost for centuries.
In 1767 and 1768, a number of objects made by renowned eighteenth-century Roman goldsmith Luigi Valadier (1726-1785) were sent from Rome to an unnamed "principal church in Mexico," among them a monstrance (a vessel in which the consecrated Host is shown). All were thought to be lost. During the course of The Frick Collection's 2018 exhibition Luigi Valadier: Splendor in Eighteenth-Century Rome, Frick deputy director Xavier F. Salomon kept asking himself whether the lost treasure might be found. The odds were slim because objects made of gold, silver, and precious stones have so often been melted for cash or recycling. But after an extensive search, Salomon located the monstrance in the Cathedral of León in Nicaragua, along with approximately twenty-five other "lost" objects--chandeliers, reliquaries, a chalice, and candlesticks--all works by Valadier, and many of them still in daily use in the cathedral.
For more than two hundred and fifty years this sacred treasure--the largest surviving Valadier collection in the world--has been known only to worshippers in León, their origin a mystery, until now.
About the Author
Xavier F. Salomon is the deputy director and Peter Jay Sharp Chief Curator, The Frick Collection, New York.