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Tomb Effigy of Alonso de Mera (died May 22. 1553)
Tomb Effigy of Alonso de Mera (died May 22. 1553)

Tomb Effigy of Alonso de Mera (died May 22. 1553)

Juan de Montejo (Spanish, died 1601)
Unidentified artist, Spanish
1592-1594
Object PlaceSpain
Medium/TechniqueStone; alabaster
DimensionsOverall: 152.4 x 63.5 x 77.5 cm, 491.7 kg (60 x 25 x 30 1/2 in., 1084 lb.)
Mounted (rolling steel base/2 removal slots ontop for inserting straps): 133.4 x 99.1 x 64.8 cm, 90.72 kg (52 1/2 x 39 x 25 1/2 in., 200 lb.)
Credit Line1939 Purchase Fund
Accession number44.813
On View
On view
ClassificationsSculpture
Collections
Description

Alonso de Mera, dressed in armor, kneels in prayer. This statue comes from his home town of Zamora, Spain, where it once decorated his tomb in the now-destroyed monastery church of S. Pablo and S. Ildefonso. De Mera (d. 1533) founded the monastery upon his return from Peru, where he made his fortune. He wears a dagger at his back, and the sculpture once also included a full sword, likely made in metal. A helmet and gauntlets, now lost, were originally set humbly near his feet, carved together in alabaster with a little page boy asleep, a sign of grief for the dead knight. Research published in 2016 allowed us to identify the subject, the artist, and the original location of the sculpture—which had been incorrectly identified when the MFA acquired the work more than seventy years ago. Most recently, the statue was called simply a “Kneeling Knight.”

ProvenanceBetween 1592 and 1594, installed in the church of the monastery of S. Pablo and S. Ildefonso, Zamora, Spain [see note 1]; between 1895 and 1901, the sculpture was removed and sold [see note 2]. Probably early 20th century, Spanish Art Gallery, London; sold by the Spanish Art Gallery to William Randolph Hearst (b. 1863 - d. 1951), New York; November 28, 1940, sold by Hearst to the Brummer Gallery, New York (stock no. N4831) [see note 3]; 1944, sold by Brummer to the MFA for $26,000. (Accession Date: November 9, 1944)

NOTES:
[1] Part of the funerary monument to Alonso de Mera (d. 1553), founder of the monastery, which was installed in the main chapel of the church. On the identification and early history of the sculpture, see Sergio Pérez-Martín and Luis Vasallo-Toranzo, "A Renaissance Spanish knight in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston," Burlington Magazine 158 (November 2016), pp. 864-869.

[2] Pérez-Martín and Vasallo-Toranzo (as above, n. 1), p. 867. Following the suppression of monasteries after the Napoleonic wars, the government sold the property of S. Pedro and S. Ildefonso in the nineteenth century.

[3] When this sculpture was acquired from Brummer Gallery, it was said to have come from a monastery in Zamora, and to represent Don Monzo Averesque, who was believed to be the monastery's founder.
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