Skip to main content

Saint Peter as Pope

third quarter of 14th century
Object PlaceFrance
Medium/TechniqueStone; limestone, intrasparite, with traces of polychromy
DimensionsOverall: 152.5 x 47 x 40.6cm (60 1/16 x 18 1/2 x 16in.)
Mount (wooden pallet /UHMW pad ): 10.2 x 61 x 68.6 cm (4 x 24 x 27 in.)
Credit Line1948 Purchase Fund
Accession number48.265
On View
On view
ClassificationsSculpture
Collections
Description
St. Peter was considered the first Pope because of Christ's charge to him: "Thou are Peter and on you I found my church".  Peter is shown here in papal ceremonial dress, with the triple-crowned tiara signifying his spiritual and temporal authority. This crown and the clasp of his stole, or cope, would have originally been encrusted with jewels. St. Peter blesses with his right hand, and would once have held keys in his left hand, recalling that Christ gave him "the keys to the kingdom of heaven." This imposing sculpture would have asserted papal authority and primacy by making clear the connections between St. Peter and the Pope.
Provenance1945, Demotte, New York; October 26, 1945, sold by Demotte to the Brummer Gallery, New York (stock no. N6467); 1948, sold by the Brummer Gallery to the MFA for $7000. (Accession Date: March 11, 1948)

Virgin and Child
Unidentified artist
1310–20
Saint Michael Weighing Souls
Unidentified artist
early 14th century
Acolyte
Unidentified artist
first half 15th century
Pleurant
Unidentified artist, French
about 1475–1500
Angel from an Archivolt
Unidentified artist
end of 13th century
Lamentation
Unidentified artist
about 1415
Mary and Joseph Adoring the Child
Unidentified artist
15th century
Trumpeting Angel
Unidentified artist
14th century
The Kindred of Saint Anne (Holy Kith and Kin)
Unidentified artist, English, 15th century
15th century
Virgin and Child
Unidentified artist
14th century
Unidentified artist, Italian (Florentine), 15th century
about 1480–1500