Lądek-Zdrój
Spa town · Gmina Lądek-Zdrój
Monument
The Holy Trinity statue in Lądek-Zdrój is a Baroque votive statue located on the western side of the Lądek-Zdrój Market Square, created between 1739 and 1741 by the sculptor Michael Klahr the Elder.
Carved from sandstone, the statue was commissioned by Johann Anton Reichel, a Lądek-Zdrój city councillor, legal advisor, and notary, as a votive offering for the salvation of part of the city from a devastating fire that struck Lądek-Zdrój on the night of 7–8 March 1739.
The Lądek-Zdrój column was first convincingly linked to Klahr the Elder and described in detail, along with surviving designs (a drawing and a bozzetto), by E. Meyer in the work Michael Klahr der Ältere. Sein Leben und Werk, published in Wrocław in 1931.
The composition of Klahr's workshop staff is unknown, but such workshops typically consisted of a master and one to three assistants (journeymen and apprentices). Klahr organized work and commissions, prepared designs, and submitted them to the patron for approval of the final form. He personally created bozzetti and other models for the workshop. In the 1730s, Klahr's workshop produced numerous works, suggesting he employed a larger number of assistants on a permanent basis. Due to the scope of the work and the use of stone – a material less commonly used by Klahr compared to wood – it is assumed that he created the statue with significant involvement from assistants. Comparisons between his design drawing and sculptural sketch with their realization suggest that Klahr participated in the monument's creation and supervised the remaining work, with his involvement in some tasks limited to finishing more complex elements. The detail work indicates contributions from three individuals with varying skill levels. Klahr is credited with sculpting the most plastic and refined figures: Jesus at the top and Saint John the Evangelist on the balustrade around the pedestal. The first assistant, likely a skilled journeyman, created Saints Luke, Anna, and Joachim, as well as much of the God the Father figure at the top. The second, less skilled assistant crafted the remaining three standing figures – Mary, Saint Joseph, and Saint Anthony. Some details in the execution of Mary, Saint Anthony, and Saint Joseph suggest involvement by the master or the first assistant. The dove representing the Holy Spirit is considered the independent work of the second assistant, who may also have initially shaped the God the Father figure and handled simpler masonry details. It is also assumed that Klahr employed a stonemason responsible for the architectural structure and details such as cornices, volutes, the balustrade, and certain ornaments.
The identities of the sculptors collaborating with Klahr on the statue remain unknown, though it is suggested that Ludwig Andreas Jäschke, a sculptor from Bardo, may have been part of Klahr's workshop team. Johann Joseph Prause likely also passed through Klahr's Lądek-Zdrój workshop. It is difficult to determine Prause's status in the atelier; the most likely hypothesis is that he was an apprentice under the master, though his presence as a journeyman or collaborator cannot be entirely ruled out.
Klahr never saw his final completed (and largest in scale) work in its intended location. He died on 9 March 1742, shortly before the monument was erected in the market square. This claim, popularized by Bernhard Patzak [ pl ], based on interpreting the chronogram on the statue and comparing it with Klahr's death date, is challenged by Meyer, who points to drawings of the Lądek-Zdrój market square from 1739 showing the statue already in place.
The first restoration of the statue took place in 1873, commemorated by an inscription in German on the back of the pedestal:
The immediate surroundings of the statue have changed several times. In the earliest photograph, the statue was surrounded by stone posts connected by chains. From at least the early 20th century, the statue was enclosed by a fenced flower bed, with a steel fence forming a semicircle around the statue and a rectangle on the town hall side. Access to the gate in the balustrade was left open from the main side, and three trees grew on the town hall side. The fence and flower bed remained until at least 1969. Photographs from 1970 and later show no flower bed, with the area around the balustrade paved with stone slabs. After the market square's surface was renovated in 2001, the area around the statue was paved with cobblestones, enclosed by metal posts connected by chains. Originally, some parts of the statue were painted, as shown in photographs from before 1945.
The most recent restoration, funded by the Lower Silesian Voivodeship government, was completed in 2008.
The statue takes the form of a nearly seven-meter-tall obelisk, surrounded by a richly decorated balustrade, consisting of a wide pedestal supporting a slender pillar. Its composition incorporates numerous Trinitarian elements: the horizontal cross section of both parts of the obelisk is approximately triangular (giving the statue three sides), and each of its three levels features three life-sized sculptures, symmetrically placed at the corners of the cross-section on the first two levels. The northern wall is the main facade, distinguished by a dedicatory plaque, a console with the patron's coat of arms, and the figure of Mary. The balustrade on this side has a gap with a metal gate.
The figures of saints on the first two levels are given a typical Baroque pose of exalted contrapposto – the figures appear frozen in motion, dynamic, emphasized by their massive silhouettes twisted around their own axes, tilted heads, and heavily folded garments. The remaining figures feature calm, less varied poses, representing a continuation of Klahr's "mature" style, oriented toward Prague sculpture, which he developed in the late 1720s and early 1730s.
On the wavy barrier surrounding the main part of the statue stand sculptures of saints:
- Luke the Evangelist (left), with an ox at his feet and a book and palette with three brushes in his right hand. He was a painter and physician, and legend attributes to him the first portrait of the Virgin Mary. He is the patron of painters, artists, and physicians.
- John the Evangelist (right), with an eagle at his feet holding an inkwell in its beak; the saint holds a book in his left hand, dated 1740, likely indicating the figure's completion year. Author of the Book of Revelation, Jesus entrusted him with the care of His mother from the cross. He is the patron of 27 professions, including theologians, writers, and pharmacists.
- Anthony of Padua (rear), in a Franciscan habit, with a book in his right hand. He taught philosophy at the University of Bologna and was known for delivering fervent sermons. He is the patron of marriages, fiancés, and an advocate for lost people and items. These figures are not directly related to Trinitarian or Marian themes but to the patron – two of them represent his patron saints.
On consoles at the base of the pillar are representations of three figures significant to the Virgin Mary:
- Saint Joachim (left), Mary's father, depicted as a shepherd with a staff, with a lamb at his feet. Patron of parents and grandparents.
- Saint Anne (right), Mary's mother, with a book (symbolizing teaching her daughter to read).
- Saint Joseph (rear), Mary's husband, with his usual attribute – a hatchet. Patron of carpenters, lumberjacks, and craftsmen. At the central point of the statue, on its main wall, between the pillar's base (representing Earth) and its summit (symbolizing Heaven), above the console with the patron's cartouche, slightly higher than the adjacent figures of Saints Joachim and Anne, Klahr placed the figure of Mary Immaculate with a wreath of 12 apocalyptic stars around her head. The Virgin Mary, with hands clasped to the left and head tilted back to the right, stands on a crescent moon, referencing the Assumption and corresponding to the description in the Book of Revelation.
Below the figure of Mary, in the middle of the pedestal, is the only secular element of the sculpture – a dedicatory plaque. It contains a chronogram with the date encoded in Roman numeral letters (DCCCCCCCCCLLLLXVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII) – 1745. The text and its translation from Latin read: