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  • Ambulatory and tabernacle, Catedral de Santa Cruz de Cadiz (Cadiz Cathedral), designed by Vicente Acero in Baroque and Neoclassical style and built 1722-1838, Cadiz, Andalusia, Southern Spain. The cathedral interior is 85m long and 60m wide in a triple-nave Latin cross plan, with the tabernacle under the dome in a Corinthian structure resembling a Greek temple. Cadiz is one of the oldest cities in Europe, founded by the Phoenicians in 1100 BC, and later became a Carthaginian then a Roman city, and Spain's constitution was signed here in 1812. It is situated on a peninsula on the Costa de la Luz. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_SPAIN_MC348.jpg
  • Ambulatory and tabernacle, Catedral de Santa Cruz de Cadiz (Cadiz Cathedral), designed by Vicente Acero in Baroque and Neoclassical style and built 1722-1838, Cadiz, Andalusia, Southern Spain. The cathedral interior is 85m long and 60m wide in a triple-nave Latin cross plan, with the tabernacle under the dome in a Corinthian structure resembling a Greek temple. Cadiz is one of the oldest cities in Europe, founded by the Phoenicians in 1100 BC, and later became a Carthaginian then a Roman city, and Spain's constitution was signed here in 1812. It is situated on a peninsula on the Costa de la Luz. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_SPAIN_MC307.jpg
  • Top of the tabernacle and the dome of the tabernacle with frescoes by Antonio Palomino and Jose Risueno, in the Granada Charterhouse or Monasterio de la Cartuja, a Carthusian monastery founded 1506, in Baroque style, in Granada, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Granada was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1984. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC337.jpg
  • Statue of a bishop in a gilded niche in the Iglesia del Sagrario or Church of the Tabernacle, built 1704 in Baroque style after designs by  Francisco Hurtado Izquierdo and Jose de Bada y Navajas, adjacent to Granada Cathedral, or the Cathedral of the Incarnation, Granada, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Granada was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1984. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC220.jpg
  • Statue of the Virgin on a cloud in the Iglesia del Sagrario or Church of the Tabernacle, built 1704 in Baroque style after designs by Francisco Hurtado Izquierdo and Jose de Bada y Navajas, adjacent to Granada Cathedral, or the Cathedral of the Incarnation, Granada, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Granada was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1984. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC215.jpg
  • Statue of a mater dolorosa or weeping Virgin Mary, Our Lady of Sorrows, with aurora halo in a gilded niche in the Iglesia del Sagrario or Church of the Tabernacle, built 1704 in Baroque style after designs by Francisco Hurtado Izquierdo and Jose de Bada y Navajas, adjacent to Granada Cathedral, or the Cathedral of the Incarnation, Granada, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Granada was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1984. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC211.jpg
  • Statue of Christ wounded, carrying the cross, in the Iglesia del Sagrario or Church of the Tabernacle, built 1704 in Baroque style after designs by Francisco Hurtado Izquierdo and Jose de Bada y Navajas, adjacent to Granada Cathedral, or the Cathedral of the Incarnation, Granada, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Granada was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1984. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC213.jpg
  • Statue of a child, possibly Christ, with a cross and aurora halo in a gilded niche in the Iglesia del Sagrario or Church of the Tabernacle, built 1704 in Baroque style after designs by Francisco Hurtado Izquierdo and Jose de Bada y Navajas, adjacent to Granada Cathedral, or the Cathedral of the Incarnation, Granada, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Granada was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1984. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC212.jpg
  • Statue of the Virgin on a cloud in the Iglesia del Sagrario or Church of the Tabernacle, built 1704 in Baroque style after designs by Francisco Hurtado Izquierdo and Jose de Bada y Navajas, adjacent to Granada Cathedral, or the Cathedral of the Incarnation, Granada, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Granada was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1984. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC214.jpg
  • Virgin and child, detail from the Tabernacolo dei Linaioli, or Tabernacle of the Linaioli, a marble aedicula or small shrine designed by Lorenzo Ghiberti, 1378-1455, made by Simone di Nanni da Fiesole, and painted 1432-33 by Fra Angelico, 1395-1455, in the Dominican Convent of St Mark, now the Museo Nazionale di San Marco, in Florence, Tuscany, Italy. The tabernacle was commissioned for the exterior of the headquarters of the Linaoli or linen manufacturer's guild, in the Old Market of Florence. The original convent was rebuilt 1437-52 for Cosimo I de Medici by Michelozzo di Bartolomeo Michelozzi, 1396-1472, in Renaissance style. The interior walls were painted 1439-44 with frescoes by Fra Angelico and his assistants. The convent is part of the Florence UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_ITALY_MC_331.jpg
  • Fresco of the Virgin surrounding the reliquary tabernacle, 1549, in the Basilique Notre-Dame de l'Epine, or Basilica of Our Lady of the Thorn, L'Epine, Marne, Champagne-Ardenne, France. The church was built 1405-1527 in Flamboyant Gothic style, is listed as a historic monument and as a UNESCO World Heritage Site as part of the Santiago de Compostela pilgrimage site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC15_FRANCE_MC_1273.jpg
  • Opened tabernacle showing the ostensoir (monstrance), 2012, by Fleur Nabert, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC029.jpg
  • Choir showing the altar with Paschal candles on both sides, Presider chair (left) and celebrant chair (right), Vierge du sourire (Smiling Virgin) containing the tabernacle in the background, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC015.jpg
  • The Angels receive their Cups, with 7 angels from the temple of the tabernacle receiving vials filled with the wrath of God, the winged lion of St Mark, and St John, detail of the fifth piece depicting the 7 Cups, from the Tenture de l'Apocalypse or Apocalypse Tapestry, made 1373-82 by Nicolas Bataille in the workshop of Robert Poincon after preparatory drawings by Hennequin de Bruges, in the Musee de la Tapisserie de l'Apocalypse, in the Chateau d'Angers, Angers, Maine-et-Loire, France. The tapestry was commissioned by Louis I duc d'Anjou and depicts the Apocalypse of John. It measures 140m and is divided into 6 pieces with 90 scenes. Although bequeathed to Angers Cathedral by King Rene in the 15th century, the tapestry was reconstructed and restored in the 19th century, listed as a historic monument and exhibited in the castle. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_0416.jpg
  • Neoclassical altarpiece by Sebastian and Francisco Solis, in the Capilla del Rostro Santo, built by Juan de Aranda in the 17th century, the main chapel in the Catedral de la Asuncion de Jaen, or Santa Iglesia Catedral de la Asuncion de la Virgen, in Jaen, Andalusia, Spain. The relic of the Santo Rostro or Holy Face (La Veronica) is enclosed in a reliquary made by Jose Francisco de Valderrama in 1731. On the right is the Altar mayor or main altar, made in 1657 by Pedro Portillo from red marble, with tabernacle by Juan Pedro Arnal with a jasper crystal cross framed in bronze and 6 white marble angels. The current cathedral was built in the 16th century on the site of an older building, and is known for its Renaissance chapter house and sacristy by Andres de Vandelvira and its Baroque facade by Eufrasio Lopez de Rojas. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_025.jpg
  • Neoclassical altarpiece by Sebastian and Francisco Solis, in the Capilla del Rostro Santo, built by Juan de Aranda in the 17th century, the main chapel in the Catedral de la Asuncion de Jaen, or Santa Iglesia Catedral de la Asuncion de la Virgen, in Jaen, Andalusia, Spain. The relic of the Santo Rostro or Holy Face (La Veronica) is enclosed in a reliquary made by Jose Francisco de Valderrama in 1731. In front is the Altar mayor or main altar, made in 1657 by Pedro Portillo from red marble, with tabernacle by Juan Pedro Arnal with a jasper crystal cross framed in bronze and 6 white marble angels. The current cathedral was built in the 16th century on the site of an older building, and is known for its Renaissance chapter house and sacristy by Andres de Vandelvira and its Baroque facade by Eufrasio Lopez de Rojas. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_068.jpg
  • Nave of the Catedral de Santa Cruz de Cadiz (Cadiz Cathedral), designed by Vicente Acero in Baroque and Neoclassical style and built 1722-1838, Cadiz, Andalusia, Southern Spain. The cathedral interior is 85m long and 60m wide in a triple-nave Latin cross plan, with the tabernacle under the dome and gold pulpits to either side. Cadiz is one of the oldest cities in Europe, founded by the Phoenicians in 1100 BC, and later became a Carthaginian then a Roman city, and Spain's constitution was signed here in 1812. It is situated on a peninsula on the Costa de la Luz. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_SPAIN_MC305.jpg
  • Choir showing the altar with Paschal candles on both sides, Presider chair (left) and celebrant chair (right), Vierge du sourire (Smiling Virgin) containing the tabernacle in the background, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC016.jpg
  • The Angels receive their Cups, with 7 angels from the temple of the tabernacle receiving vials filled with the wrath of God, the winged lion of St Mark, detail of the fifth piece depicting the 7 Cups, from the Tenture de l'Apocalypse or Apocalypse Tapestry, made 1373-82 by Nicolas Bataille in the workshop of Robert Poincon after preparatory drawings by Hennequin de Bruges, in the Musee de la Tapisserie de l'Apocalypse, in the Chateau d'Angers, Angers, Maine-et-Loire, France. The tapestry was commissioned by Louis I duc d'Anjou and depicts the Apocalypse of John. It measures 140m and is divided into 6 pieces with 90 scenes. Although bequeathed to Angers Cathedral by King Rene in the 15th century, the tapestry was reconstructed and restored in the 19th century, listed as a historic monument and exhibited in the castle. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_0417.jpg
  • Altar, in polychrome sculpted stone, 1873, by the Saint-Joseph workshop, with the Trinity and the 12 apostles, and an enamelled tabernacle, in the Eglise de la Trinite d'Angers, a parish church built in the 12th century in Angers, Maine-et-Loire, France. The church is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_0491.jpg
  • Vierge du sourire (Smiling Virgin), bronze strip depicting the outline of the virgin and containing the tabernacle, 2012, by Fleur Nabert, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC024.jpg
  • Closed tabernacle (detail showing the lock), Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC028.jpg
  • Opened tabernacle showing the ostensoir (monstrance), 2012, by Fleur Nabert, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC030.jpg
  • Choir showing the altar with Paschal candles on both sides, Presider chair (left) and celebrant chair (right), Vierge du sourire (Smiling Virgin) containing the tabernacle in the background, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC040.jpg
  • Floodlit statue of Therese de Lisieux and Vierge du sourire (Smiling Virgin) containing the tabernacle in the shaded choir, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert.
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC061.jpg
  • Neoclassical altarpiece by Sebastian and Francisco Solis, in the Capilla del Rostro Santo, built by Juan de Aranda in the 17th century, the main chapel in the Catedral de la Asuncion de Jaen, or Santa Iglesia Catedral de la Asuncion de la Virgen, in Jaen, Andalusia, Spain. The relic of the Santo Rostro or Holy Face (La Veronica) is enclosed in a reliquary made by Jose Francisco de Valderrama in 1731. In front is the Altar mayor or main altar, made in 1657 by Pedro Portillo from red marble, with tabernacle by Juan Pedro Arnal with a jasper crystal cross framed in bronze and 6 white marble angels. The current cathedral was built in the 16th century on the site of an older building, and is known for its Renaissance chapter house and sacristy by Andres de Vandelvira and its Baroque facade by Eufrasio Lopez de Rojas. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_022.jpg
  • Altar mayor or main altar, made in 1657 by Pedro Portillo from red marble, with tabernacle by Juan Pedro Arnal with a jasper crystal cross framed in bronze and 6 white marble angels, in the Catedral de la Asuncion de Jaen, or Santa Iglesia Catedral de la Asuncion de la Virgen, in Jaen, Andalusia, Spain. The current cathedral was built in the 16th century on the site of an older building, and is known for its Renaissance chapter house and sacristy by Andres de Vandelvira and its Baroque facade by Eufrasio Lopez de Rojas. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_026.jpg
  • Closed tabernacle, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC025.jpg
  • Closed tabernacle (detail), Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC027.jpg
  • Detail of Vierge du sourire (Smiling Virgin), bronze strip depicting the outline of the virgin and containing the tabernacle, 2012, by Fleur Nabert, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC026.jpg
  • Opened tabernacle showing the ostensoir (monstrance), 2012, by Fleur Nabert, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC031.jpg
  • Vierge du sourire (Smiling Virgin), bronze strip depicting the outline of the virgin and containing the tabernacle, ostensoir (monstrance) in the foreground, 2012, by Fleur Nabert, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC042.jpg
  • The Angels receive their Cups, with 7 angels from the temple of the tabernacle receiving vials filled with the wrath of God, the winged lion of St Mark, and St John, detail of the fifth piece depicting the 7 Cups, from the Tenture de l'Apocalypse or Apocalypse Tapestry, made 1373-82 by Nicolas Bataille in the workshop of Robert Poincon after preparatory drawings by Hennequin de Bruges, in the Musee de la Tapisserie de l'Apocalypse, in the Chateau d'Angers, Angers, Maine-et-Loire, France. The tapestry was commissioned by Louis I duc d'Anjou and depicts the Apocalypse of John. It measures 140m and is divided into 6 pieces with 90 scenes. Although bequeathed to Angers Cathedral by King Rene in the 15th century, the tapestry was reconstructed and restored in the 19th century, listed as a historic monument and exhibited in the castle. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    _CC_2384.jpg
  • The Angels receive their Cups, with 7 angels from the temple of the tabernacle receiving vials filled with the wrath of God, the winged lion of St Mark, detail of the fifth piece depicting the 7 Cups, from the Tenture de l'Apocalypse or Apocalypse Tapestry, made 1373-82 by Nicolas Bataille in the workshop of Robert Poincon after preparatory drawings by Hennequin de Bruges, in the Musee de la Tapisserie de l'Apocalypse, in the Chateau d'Angers, Angers, Maine-et-Loire, France. The tapestry was commissioned by Louis I duc d'Anjou and depicts the Apocalypse of John. It measures 140m and is divided into 6 pieces with 90 scenes. Although bequeathed to Angers Cathedral by King Rene in the 15th century, the tapestry was reconstructed and restored in the 19th century, listed as a historic monument and exhibited in the castle. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    _CC_2385.jpg
  • Altar, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC023.JPG
  • Ambon, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC021.jpg
  • Nave and choir, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC043.jpg
  • Artist Fleur Nabert posing in the choir, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert.
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC046.jpg
  • Artist Fleur Nabert posing in the choir, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert.
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC047.jpg
  • Jesus shouting abuse at the moneylenders in the temple in Jerusalem, c. 1523, donated by canon Jean Witz, d. 1522 or 1523, high relief from the West side of the North transept of the Basilique Cathedrale Notre-Dame d'Amiens or Cathedral Basilica of Our Lady of Amiens, built 1220-70 in Gothic style, Amiens, Picardy, France. Amiens Cathedral was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1981. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_France_MC1086.jpg
  • Nave and choir, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC002.jpg
  • Nave and choir, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC004.jpg
  • Ambon, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC020.jpg
  • Nave and choir, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC001.jpg
  • Choir seen from the side, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC006.jpg
  • Ostensoir (monstrance), 2012, by Fleur Nabert, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC032.jpg
  • Ostensoir (monstrance), 2012, by Fleur Nabert, Chapelle Notre Dame du sourire (Chapel of our smiling lady), Ermitage Sainte-Therese, Lisieux, Normandy, France. The chapel was consecrated in December 2012 by Mgr Boulanger, bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, after being restored and furnished by sculptor Fleur Nabert. Picture by Manuel Cohen - This picture requires further clearance from the author Fleur Nabert / Autorisation necessaire aupres de l'artiste Fleur Nabert. - Further clearance required, please contact us
    01212013_FleurNabertLisieux_MC033.jpg
  • Sculpted head of Viollet le Duc, 1814-79, architect, as a cornice, sculpted 1859 in 13th century style, in the axial Chapelle de la Vierge or Lady Chapel, behind the tabernacle, in the Basilique Cathedrale Notre-Dame d'Amiens or Cathedral Basilica of Our Lady of Amiens, built 1220-70 in Gothic style, Amiens, Picardy, France. Amiens Cathedral was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1981. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_France_MC1043.jpg
  • Sculpted head of Viollet le Duc, 1814-79, architect, as a cornice, sculpted 1859 in 13th century style, in the axial Chapelle de la Vierge or Lady Chapel, behind the tabernacle, in the Basilique Cathedrale Notre-Dame d'Amiens or Cathedral Basilica of Our Lady of Amiens, built 1220-70 in Gothic style, Amiens, Picardy, France. Amiens Cathedral was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1981. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_France_MC1044.jpg
  • Virgin and child, fresco painted c. 1468, by Matteo da Gualdo (Gualdo Tadino), c. 1430-1507, originally from the Confraternita del SS Sacramento where it probably decorated a tabernacle or niche along with side splays depicting saints, now in the Confraternity Room of the Assisi Diocesan Museum, or Museo Diocesano e Cripta di San Rufino, Assisi, Umbria, Italy. The museum was founded in 1941 by bishop Giuseppe Placido Niccolini under the Cathedral Piazza to preserve works of art from Assisi's collections. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ITALY_MC459.jpg
  • Virgin and child, detail, fresco painted c. 1468, by Matteo da Gualdo (Gualdo Tadino), c. 1430-1507, originally from the Confraternita del SS Sacramento where it probably decorated a tabernacle or niche along with side splays depicting saints, now in the Confraternity Room of the Assisi Diocesan Museum, or Museo Diocesano e Cripta di San Rufino, Assisi, Umbria, Italy. The museum was founded in 1941 by bishop Giuseppe Placido Niccolini under the Cathedral Piazza to preserve works of art from Assisi's collections. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_ITALY_MC460.JPG
  • Baroque cupola with plaster mouldings and a lantern, 18th century, in the altar area of the church, in a small room flanking the tabernacle, at the Real Monasterio de Sant Jeroni de Cotalba, a monastery founded in 1388 by the duke of Gandia, Alfons de Vell, and built 14th - 18th centuries in Valencian Gothic, mudejar, Renaissance, Baroque and Neoclassical styles, in Alfauir, Valencia, Spain. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0242.jpg
  • Lamb of God, detail of a tapestry hung above the tabernacle on the high altar at the Benedictine Abbey at Ypres, in the Community Room, used to display items from the history of the Benedictine order, in Kylemore Castle, built in the 19th century by Mitchell and Margaret Henry and converted to a Benedictine monastery, Kylemore Abbey, in 1920, in Connemara, County Galway, Ireland. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC18_Ireland_MC_113.jpg
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