LACMA

ShopMembershipMyLACMATickets
LACMA
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
5905 Wilshire Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90036
info@lacma.org
(323) 857-6000
Sign up to receive emails
Subscribe
© Museum Associates 2026
  • About LACMA
  • Jobs
  • Building LACMA
  • Host An Event
  • Unframed
  • Press
  • FAQs
  • Log in to MyLACMA
  • Privacy Policy
© Museum Associates 2026
Collections

Unknown
Angel in a Niche, Fragment from the Tomb of Don Garcia Osorio from the Church of San Pedro, Ocañacirca 1500-1510

On view:
Geffen Galleries, floor 2
White marble relief sculpture of a standing praying angel with gilded curly hair, set within a rectangular niche above a carved column and base
Artist or Maker
Unknown
Title
Angel in a Niche, Fragment from the Tomb of Don Garcia Osorio from the Church of San Pedro, Ocaña
Place Made
Spain
Date Made
circa 1500-1510
Medium
Alabaster with traces of polychromy and gilding
Dimensions
26 × 11 1/2 × 4 in. (66.04 × 29.21 × 10.16 cm)
Credit Line
William Randolph Hearst Collection
Accession Number
49.23.18
Classification
Sculpture
Collecting Area
European Painting and Sculpture
Curatorial Notes

Carved out of glistening white alabaster, an angel stands on an elevated platform, hands clasped in prayer, billowing curls highlighted in gold gilt. This angel is one of two fragments in LACMA’s collection (see also 49.23.17) that were once part of a tomb commemorating Don García Osorio (d. after 1502), a knight in the Order of Santiago, and his wife Doña María de Perea (d. 1499) in the church of San Pedro, Ocaña, Spain. Located outside Toledo, the church was both a political meeting place and a religious center for the order and even occasionally the Spanish monarchy. The Osorio family contributed funds to help build the Sangre de Cristo (Blood of Christ) chapel, at the center of which their sepulchre was later placed. As wealthy and influential individuals, the couple’s memorial functioned not only as a place of commemoration and prayer for the Osorio’s descendants but as a reminder of their social status.

Like other aristocratic Spanish tombs, this was constructed from alabaster, a soft stone that resembles marble but is easier to carve. Alabaster was also quarried locally, contributing to the material’s popularity for both private and public sculptural projects for the Spanish elite. According to a description of the Osorio tomb written before it was dismantled in the early twentieth century, it featured a joint sarcophagus for the couple topped with two recumbent effigies (portrait sculptures) and was decorated on the sides with panels featuring angels, Saint Catherine, personifications of Temperance and Prudence, and heraldic symbols, among other now-lost imagery. Related pieces of the tomb are currently held in multiple museum collections, including the figural effigy of Don García at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

2024

Selected Bibliography
  • Valentiner, W.R. Gothic and Renaissance Sculptures: in the Collection of the Los Angeles County Museum. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum, 1951.
  • Schaefer, Scott, and Peter Fusco. European Painting and Sculpture in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art: an Illustrated Summary Catalogue. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1987.