Updated 7 p.m. ET with the replacement head being removed
The CBC reports that an odd-looking substitute for a stolen head of Jesus
has itself now been removed
But while the temporary head was in place, it inspired
lots of joy
Our original post:
In this one, very particular, instance, maybe baby Jesus was better off headless.
A statue at a church in Canada was apparently vandalized last October, and the baby Jesus' head had been missing ever since.
So a well-intentioned local artist offered to help out — creating a terra cotta substitute that has popped eyes, dropped jaws and shocked the general public in Sudbury, in northern Ontario.
The church's priest admits the contrast in color, between the white stone and red clay, is jarring to the eye. But judge for yourself just how much there is to object to in this artistic edit.
Marina von Stackelberg
reported on the story for CBC
In past cases of vandalism, von Stackelberg notes, the congregation had always managed to track down the pilfered head and restore the statue to wholeness.
"This time we looked high and low," Lajeunesse told the CBC. "No head. No Jesus."
So he reached out to local businesses, but he couldn't find anyone willing to replace just the head.
"Replacing the entire statue would cost between $6,000 and $10,000," von Stackelberg reports — and the priest was worried that after that expense, the head would be broken and stolen again.
So he gladly accepted the help of a local artist who volunteered to help. The result has been compared to
Maggie Simpson
Lajeunesse says the terra cotta head — already melting away in the rain — is just the first try at a head and is merely temporary. The artist is working on a permanent stone substitute.
A local news outlet
reports
Meanwhile, Lajeunesse says he wasn't quite prepared for the backlash from hurt parishioners.
"I wasn't trained for this in seminary," he told von Stackelberg.
You can find the whole story
at the CBC
And for further reading, you might enjoy these tales of botched restorations:
- the 19th century Ecce Homo
fresco in Spain
- the crumbling section of the Great Wall of China that was
paved over
- the
ancient tomb in Spain
- the Qing Dynasty frescoes
painted over
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