MEDIA INFORMATION

 
 
 
COLLECTION NAME:
Santo Collection
Record
Creator display:
Molleno, Antonio (Colonial Spanish American santero, active ca. 1815-1845)
Creator note:
also known as Chili painter
Creator role:
ULAN
Date display:
ca. 1820-1840
Title:
Nuestra Señora de los Dolores
Title:
Our Lady of Sorrows
Description:
Portrait of a female figure in a red gown and blue mantle. Her hands are folded in front of her, and a sword pierces her chest.
Location name:
New Mexico
Materials display:
paint on wood panel
Material name:
paint
Material name:
panel (wood by form)
Source name:
Thomas J. Steele, S.J.: The Regis University Collection of New Mexico and Colorado Santos.
Subject term:
Mary, Blessed Virgin, Saint
Subject term:
women
Subject term:
red
Subject term:
blue
Work type:
retablos (panel paintings)
Conservation note:
"Probably repainted, though carefully. Cleaned, conserved with Soluvar Sept '86."
Exhibition note:
Abdington, VA: William King Regional Art Center, Nov. 1996-Jan. 1997; Aurora, CO: Aurora History Museum, May-Aug. 2009
Acquisition note:
1968. "The money came from selling .22 magnum (maple stock/dissertation) to Tom Montoya."
Accession number:
RU0002
Measurements display:
31 x 23 cm
Santo Subject:
Nuestra Señora de los Dolores (Our Lady of Sorrows)
Santo Subject Type:
Titles of Mary
Feast Day:
Friday before Palm Sunday and September 16
Patronage:
Patronage: Strength in suffering; compassion for others in sorrow; help with children, help in childbirth; for sinners. There is a definite penitential interest, as Chapter III (Santos and Saints) stated, since it is usually the Dolores bulto that engages in the Encuentro enactment as the Jesús Nazareno bulto moves in procession toward Calvary.
Note:
This is Mary enduring the sorrows predicted in Luke 2:35, especially that of the crucifixion of Jesus. The advocation arose about 1390, perhaps when the mourning figure of Mary was separated from a "Calvario" (crucifix with Mary and John) and made a distinct object of veneration; see Wroth, Images of Penance, Images of Mercy, p. 75. Mary standing with her hands folded, a sword or seven swords piercing her heart, wearing a red gown and a cowl; very infrequently she is crowned.
Rights text:
IN COPYRIGHT - EDUCATIONAL USE PERMITTED