MADRID.- On display at the
Museo del Prado until 31 May (Room 18A) is the monstrance from the church of San Ignacio in Bogotá, an object known as The Lettuce in reference to the green of its 1,485 emeralds, and a remarkable example of Baroque art in a land of goldsmiths. Now exhibited for the first time outside Colombia, The Lettuce, which was made by the goldsmith José de Galaz between 1700 and 1707, is considered one of the most beautiful and ornate liturgical items in South America. The Lettuce is part of the Collection of the Banco de la República de Colombia. It has been loaned within the Prados Invited Work programme, sponsored by the Fundación Amigos del Museo del Prado since 2010. President Santos of Colombia will be visiting the Museum tomorrow, accompanied by the President of the Spanish government, Mariano Rajoy, and the Minister of Culture, Education and Sport, Ignacio Wert. Their tour of the Museum will include a particular focus on the display of this monstrance from the church of San Ignacio in Bogotá.
The Museo del Prado is displaying the monstrance from the church of San Ignacio in Bogotá, an object known as The Lettuce and considered one of the most important and unique works in the Collection of the Banco de la República de Colombia. This special loan has been made in conjunction with Colombias presence as Special Invited Country at ARCO 2015.
This exceptional object, the first piece of goldsmiths work to be included in the Prados Invited Work programme, will remain on display until 31 May in Room 18A of the Villanueva Building. This gallery displays works by Claudio Coello, Herrera the Younger and Antolínez, who created dynamic, colourful and dramatic compositions in which, as with The Lettuce, ornamentation, colour and splendour were used in the service of the Catholic liturgy.
The monstrance from the church of San Ignacio in Bogotá is the subject of the sixth edition of The Invited Work programme, sponsored by the Fundación Amigos del Museo del Prado. It follows the loans of The Virgin and Child with Angels by Jean Fouquet (1452) from the Royal Fine Arts Museum in Antwerp in 2014; Portrait of a Man (ca.1635) by Velázquez from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York,in 2012; Acrobat on a Ball (1905) by Picasso from the Pushkin Museum in Moscow in 2011; Caravaggios Descent from the Cross from the Vatican Museums in 2011; and The Daughters of Edward Darley Boit by John Singer Sargent from the Boston Museum of Fine Arts in 2010.