Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Spain’s Prado Museum confirms rediscover­y of lost Caravaggio

- BY CIARÁN GILES

MADRID — A painting whose auction in Spain was halted in 2021 on suspicion that it might be a Caravaggio has been confirmed as a work by the Italian Baroque master, Spain’s Prado Museum announced last week.

The painting, once considered to have been lost, will be unveiled to the public for the first time in the museum this month.

The Prado said in a statement the work titled “Ecce Homo” (Latin for Behold The Man) by Michelange­lo Merisi da Caravaggio will go on display from May 27 until October as a special one-piece exhibition following an agreement with its new owner, who has not been identified.

After October, the work will be moved to the Prado’s permanent collection for a further four months.

“Since its reappearan­ce at an auction three years ago, Ecce Homo has represente­d one of the greatest discoverie­s in the history of art,” the museum said.

“Painted by the great Italian artist around 1605-09 and believed to have once been part of the private collection of Phillip IV of Spain, the painting is one of around only 60 known works by Caravaggio in existence, and thus one of the most valuable old master artworks in the world,” the Prado added.

In April 2021, Spanish authoritie­s halted an auction of the work, which was then attributed to a disciple of a 17th-century Spanish painter, José de Ribera. They also put an export ban on it after the museum alerted the government it could be a Caravaggio.

The painting was due to be auctioned with a starting price tag of 1,500 euros ($1,600). The value of an authentic Caravaggio would stretch into tens of millions of dollars, if not more.

Prado Museum Director Miguel Falomir said that since then, the owners carried out studies and proceeded with the painting’s restoratio­n, which led to the discovery “that it is, in fact, a work by Caravaggio and a work that arrived in Spain in the 17th century.”

The painting is not allowed to leave Spain without government permission.

Falomir said it had been in the hands of a family in Madrid since the 19th century. The family was allowed to sell it privately earlier this year following an agreement with the Madrid regional government. The new owner wanted the public presentati­on of the piece to take place in the Prado Museum.

“For our part, we are more than happy to be the stage to present this new unshown work of Caravaggio to the public and critics,” Falomir said in a video statement released by the museum.

The oil-on-canvas work depicts the biblical passage of the Ecce Homo, in which Jesus Christ is presented to the crowds before being crucified. The work measures 44 by 34 inches. The painting was known as early as the 1600s, but experts later lost track of it.

The Prado said four of the most authoritat­ive experts on Caravaggio and Baroque painting “all share the same passionate certainty: that Ecce Homo is a masterpiec­e by the Italian artist.”

One of the experts, Maria Cristina Terzaghi, was quoted as saying, “The speed of consensus around the work being a Caravaggio upon its rediscover­y was absolutely unpreceden­ted in the critical history of the painter, on whom scholars have rarely agreed, at least in the last forty years.”

 ?? PRADO MUSEUM, VIA AP ?? Caravaggio's “Ecce Homo” was painted in the early 1600s.
PRADO MUSEUM, VIA AP Caravaggio's “Ecce Homo” was painted in the early 1600s.

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