The Christ of Maratea

This is not in Naples
and not
even in Campania,
but it’s close—and if you don’t know about it, you should. The last
town in the Campania region of Italy
as you move south along the
beautiful Tyrrhenian coast and the mountains of the Cilento national park is
Sapri. Just beyond, in the Basilicata
region,
is the town of Maratea; it is nestled
on the
hillside
below Mt. San Biagio, overlooking the Gulf of Policastro.
Overlooking Maratea, however, from the 640-meter (1900 ft.) height of
Mt. San
Biagio, itself, is a remarkable piece of sculpture—Christ the Redeemer
(top right in the above photo).
In 1941 a simple large cross was put up
on the mountain as a
war memorial. It stayed there for 20 years. In 1963 that cross was
moved to
another location near the old center of Maratea so that construction
could
begin on the statue of Christ. Count Stefano Rivetti di Valcervo
proposed the
statue and then sponsored the construction. The statue was designed by
Bruno Innocenti (1906-1996) of the Institute
of Fine Arts in Florence. As an
artist, Innocenti was a realist
and known for his delicate renderings of the female form; thus, he was
out of
step with the great wave of the avant-garde
in Europe and really out
of step with the muscle-bound hulks of Fascist realism
that surrounded him as a young man. Some of his work decorates theaters
such as
the Teatro Comunale in Florence and the Rome
Opera. Most of his works were portable and are displayed indoors. The
vast
open-air stage in the mountains above Maratea is a glorious exception.
The Redeemer was finished in 1965. The
statue is made of
concrete with a facing of white Carrera marble and stands 22 meters—or
72
feet—high. By virtue of spectacular location, subject matter and size,
the statue of the
Redeemer in Maratea is reminiscent of the statue that “everyone
knows”—the
Redeemer atop Mt. Corcovado in Rio De Janeiro. Stylistically,
however, even the casual
observer will notice differences—the different position of the arms and
hands,
for example. The Redeemer of Corcovado
is in the shape of a perfect cross—indeed, from a distance, the
sculpture could
be mistaken for a simple cross. The palms of the Corcovado Redeemer
face
forward. The Redeemer of Maratea has
arms upraised almost to a 45-degree angle; the palms face up, and the
figure
itself is robed with one side of the bottom section set slightly ahead
of the
other, as if the Redeemer were stepping forward. The Corcovado Christ
is
bearded; it is traditional and borders on the somber; the Maratea
statue is
youthfully—even “angelically” (according to my wife)— androgynous and
joyful.
Others may accept that interpretation as they wish.
(photo
credit: statue close-up © by and courtesy of W.C. Henderson)
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