image: Tacho Juarez Herrera |
Late in the 1600s the Franciscans rebuilt the present church as a shrine to the miraculous wooden image of Our Lady of Consolation.
facade images: Tacho Juarez Herrera |
The Facade
The narrow church front is dominated by a grand relief of the Holy Family, set in a square, eared frame, flanked by statues of Saints Joachim and Anne in oval frames. A smaller statue of the Virgin Mary occupies the moorish style niche overhead.The Main Altarpiece
The church has retained some of its altarpieces, mostly in late baroque “churrigueresque” style. The original main altarpiece, believed to have been designed by the baroque master Felipe de Ureña, was replaced in the 1880s by another baroque altarpiece in a later style, transferred from the Carmelite church of San Joaquín in Naucalpan.
The gilded altarpiece, whose designer is unknown, is framed in a highly ornate late 18th century manner with elongated estípite pilasters enclosing expansive niche-pilasters filled with polychrome statues and relief portraits. Putti and angel heads appear throughout.
Reflecting its Carmelite origins, much of the imagery relates to that Order, most prominently the statues of St. Teresa, the founder, in the uppermost niche and Our Lady of Mount Carmel holding a scapular in the niche below.
Jesus of the Sacred Heart |
An image of the Sacred Heart of Jesus occupies the center niche. which is framed by an elaborate canopy enclosing a bust of St. Thomas Aquinas. Busts, medallions and full length statues of numerous Catholic saints, notable and obscure, fill the other spaces.
canopy with bust of Thomas Aquinas. |
St. Angelo of Sicily and St. Albert of Jerusalem with background mural of St. Cosmas. |
text © 2016 Richard D. Perry
retablo photography by Niccolò Brooker and facade images by Tacho Juarez Herrera
gracias a todos
See our other Treasures of Mexico City: San Bernardo; Tepepan; San Felipe Neri El Nuevo; Santa Isabel Tola
gracias a todos
See our other Treasures of Mexico City: San Bernardo; Tepepan; San Felipe Neri El Nuevo; Santa Isabel Tola
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