Featured on PDR in the collection Ostentatio Genitalium in Renaissance Art

Ostentatio genitalium (the display of the genitals) refers to disparate traditions in Renaissance visual culture of attributing formal, thematic, and theological significance to the penis of Jesus. That these images seem to have been created in good faith, with pious intentions, mystifies art historians, and many refuse to recognize the category as noteworthy or distinct from the nudity of angels and putti. Yet, as examples accrue, the conspicuous attention lent to Christ’s phallus cannot escape even the most disinterested gaze. “It is no exaggeration to say that this has probably been the most taboo topic in Christian thought for two thousand years”, writes Stephen Sapp. In contrast to classical sculptural conventions, which — with exceptions like certain herma and statues of satyrs — often showcase…

Also appearing in the collection…

Pietà

Artist

Date

ca. 1612

From

Ostentatio Genitalium


Underlying Rights

Public Domain Worldwide

Digital Rights

No Additional Rights


Image Size

900 x 1400

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