Search

2. Medieval Austrian and German Painting and Sculpture (12-16th c.)

Search:
The earliest work of art in the Christian Museum – one of its most famous pieces – is the statue of Mary Magdalene (?) carved about 1170 in Cologne. While this piece was purchased for the Museum by János Simor, the majority of the medieval Austrian and German works of art come from the collection of Arnold Ipolyi. We have no detailed information about their origin; only the ones purchased from the Lehman Collection of Vienna can be identified. The majority of the paintings and some reliefs were made in Bavaria and in the areas of Vienna and Salzburg. Most of the works have lost their original, medieval context. An exception is the small Austrian triptych showing the Death of the Virgin, which Ipolyi succeeded in acquiring intact.
I.K.

Outstanding works of art in the collection:

Sculptor from Cologne
Woman holding a jar (Mary Magdalene?)

Austrian (?) painter
Evagationes Spiritus (The erring of the soul)

Austrian painter
Triptych with the Death of the Virgin

Master of the Hallein Altarpiece
Madonna of the Wheat

Painter from Salzburg
Adoration of the Kings

Austrian (?) painter
Scenes from the Legend of Sts. Felix, Regula and Exuperantius

Workshop of Jörg Breu the Elder
Crucifixion