Metropolitan Cathedral

cathedral, Mexico City, Mexico

Learn about this topic in these articles:

Assorted References

  • Latin American architecture
  • Mexico City
    • Mexico City, Mexico
      In Mexico City: Cultural institutions

      The Metropolitan Cathedral, built over a period of nearly 250 years (1573–1813) on the north side of the Zócalo, presents a mixture of three architectural styles predominant during the colonial period: Renaissance, Baroque, and Neoclassical. Its meticulously decorated Sagrarium represents the apogee of the native Baroque…

      Read More

work of

    • Balbás
      • In Jerónimo de Balbás

        …of the Kings in the Cathedral of Mexico City. This project introduced the estípite to Mexico, where it quickly spread and became a standard element of the Churrigueresque style of Mexican Baroque architecture, an overwhelmingly decorative and ornate style. The altar in the Chapel of the Kings was a prime…

        Read More
    • Tolsá
      • Equestrian statue of Charles IV, bronze by Manuel Tolsá, 1803; in Mexico City.
        In Manuel Tolsá

        …involved the completion of the cathedral in Mexico City, on which he began work in 1793. Notably, he finished the cupola (enlarging it from the original plan), raised the centre of the facade, and decorated the cathedral’s towers. He also made three allegorical sculptures—of Faith, Hope, and Charity—for the top…

        Read More
    Britannica Chatbot logo

    Britannica Chatbot

    Chatbot answers are created from Britannica articles using AI. This is a beta feature. AI answers may contain errors. Please verify important information using Britannica articles. About Britannica AI.
    Quick Facts
    Born:
    1757, Enguera, Spain
    Died:
    December 1816, Mexico City, Viceroyalty of New Spain [now in Mexico] (aged 59)
    Movement / Style:
    Neoclassical art

    Manuel Tolsá (born 1757, Enguera, Spain—died December 1816, Mexico City, Viceroyalty of New Spain [now in Mexico]) was a Spanish-born sculptor and architect who introduced Neoclassicism to New Spain (Mexico).

    Tolsá studied Neoclassical sculpture at the Academia de San Carlos in Valencia, Spain. He gained acclaim early in his career and in 1790 was named director of sculpture at the Academia de San Carlos in New Spain. He arrived there in July 1791 with an enormous library and a collection of plaster casts of ancient sculptures for his students to study. As director, he led students away from late Baroque aesthetics toward the Neoclassical style that was prevalent in Europe at the time.

    While living in New Spain, Tolsá also worked as an architect despite his lack of formal training. His first project involved the completion of the cathedral in Mexico City, on which he began work in 1793. Notably, he finished the cupola (enlarging it from the original plan), raised the centre of the facade, and decorated the cathedral’s towers. He also made three allegorical sculptures—of Faith, Hope, and Charity—for the top of the facade.

    Hagia Sophia. Istanbul, Turkey. Constantinople. Church of the Holy Wisdom. Church of the Divine Wisdom. Mosque.
    Britannica Quiz
    Architecture: The Built World

    Tolsá’s second major architectural project and the one for which he is best known was the College of Mines. His plans for the building were approved in 1797, and construction was complete in 1813. The building epitomizes the Neoclassical with its fully symmetrical and balanced design, which makes use of the most sedate of the Greek columnar orders, the Doric. Ionic columns line the interior patio, and enormous elegant staircases link the floors.

    Little of Tolsá’s sculptural work remains. His equestrian statue of Charles IV, made in 1803, is considered his most important sculpture. Apparently based on French sculptor Girardon’s statue of Louis XIV, it portrays Charles IV in the apparel of a Roman emperor seated on his horse.

    Tolsá integrated architecture and sculpture in his design for the high altar of the cathedral of Puebla, begun in 1797 and completed in 1818. Tolsá oversaw the project, which was a collaboration with a number of other artists, and made an allegorical sculpture of Purity for the altar. He also received the commission for the baldachin for the cathedral in 1797, which replaced an earlier Baroque structure. Tolsá’s baldachin relied on complex religious iconography within a Neoclassical framework of Corinthian columns topped by a cupola on which St. Peter sits. Although the baldachin is noteworthy for its general Neoclassical symmetry and orderly design, Tolsá also included Baroque elements, such as a burst of gilded rays.

    This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.