Uma cena de arte sacra em um quarto iluminado pela luz de uma janela aberta, onde uma escultura de Jesus morto repousa em um leito coberto com um tecido roxo, com outras estátuas e um crucifixo na parede ao fundo

Museum of Sacred Art

INGRESSO

R$ 15

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HORARIOS

Tuesday to Sunday, from 10:00 am to 4:30 pm

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ENDEREÇO

R. Santa Joana D'arc, 795 - Morro de São Bento, Santos - SP, 11082-460, Brasil

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Contato

(55 13) 3219-1111

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Top photo: Francisco Arrais

   

The Benedictine architectural complex composed of the Igreja Nossa Senhora do Desterro (Our Lady of Exile Church) and the old São Bento (Saint Benedict) Monastery is the Santos Museum of Sacred Art today. It was inaugurated on June 11, 1981, on the initiative of the then Diocesan Bishop Dom David Picão.

The collection brings together more than 600 sacred and religious pieces, both erudite and popular, from the 16th to the 20th century,  including sculptures, paintings, liturgical objects and vestments. The oldest statue in Brazil with a known artist is part of the collection: Our Lady of the Conception, dated 1560, by João Gonçalo Fernandes.

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A photograph displays a set of three sacred art statues exhibited on a table covered with a white cloth, prominently featuring a larger sculpture of the Virgin Mary wrapped in a blue mantle, next to a Pietà and a representation of Christ carrying the cross

Main Hall

The Main Hall features sculptures made of wood and terracotta, created between the 16th and 18th centuries. Among the works, the image of Saint Catherine of Alexandria, dating from approximately 1540, stands out; it belonged to the first chapel built in the town of Santos. The collection includes works by Benedito Calixto, Gentil Garcez, José Patrício da Silva Manso, Marino Del Favero, Guiomar Fagundes, and other renowned artists. The collection of images known as ‘paulistinhas’ (little Paulistas) refers to popular religious art and was widely used in home oratories and by the bandeirantes (explorers/pioneers), who carried small sculptures as amulets on their journeys.

   

Photo: Tadeu Nascimento
 

Monastery

The monastery, which for centuries served as a residence for Benedictine monks, has three floors and is composed of a church, sacristy, cloister, cells (rooms), halls and other spaces. The building also sheltered victims of the epidemics that plagued the city of Santos, especially in 1874, and functioned as a boarding school, between 1958 and 1968, for young Russian refugees.

 

Photo: Raimundo Rosa

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An external photograph of a simple white colonial church or chapel architecture, featuring a facade with three arches at the bottom and a bell tower on the right side, under a partly cloudy sky
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A symmetrical interior photograph shows the central nave of a simple colonial chapel, with long rows of dark wooden pews and a richly carved altar in gold and white woodwork at the back

Chapel of Nossa Senhora do Desterro

The Chapel of Nossa Senhora do Desterro, dating from 1630, features an 18th-century altarpiece characterized by its Baroque style, which depicts a wealth of decorative ornaments referencing Marian devotion, such as floral motifs (roses, sunflowers, daisies), crowning and shells, as well as Christian symbols like angels, a pelican, and acanthus leaves.

 

Photo: Raimundo Rosa

#OBomdeSantos Museum of Sacred Art

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