Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo

The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, Italy hold more than 8000 mummies, from artists and surgeons to military figures and monks who died between the end of the 16th century and the beginning of the 20th. The bodies are embalmed, fully clothed, and many of them posed as if they were still alive. As the bodies have decayed, albeit slowly, over the years, the catacombs experience apparently has become even more surreal. Architectural historian Robert Harbison of London Metropolitan University wrote about his visit to the Capuchin Catacombs in Cabinet magazine. The article is accompanied by intense photos by Marco Lanza. From the article:
 Issues 28 Assets Images Harbison3 In Palermo... corpses are treated as characters in a play. Perhaps Walt Disney and Madame Tussaud were inspired by places like this, but the Capuchin crypt will not remind you of their worlds, for in spite of all the talk about the great lengths the monks have gone to in order to create lifelike effects, it feels like somewhere that fell into disuse long ago.

Most of the corpses are wearing clothes, it is true, many of them are sitting up, and whole rows of them are standing. But standing is only a mistake of vision: they are hanging from hooks, so their feet don't normally touch the ground. And the clothe-- there's a kind of allegory in them. They are so dusty and so faded that the whole picture sinks toward something like monochrome. They remind me of a painter that a friend of mine knew who got the idea of painting indoors with the blinds drawn and the lights off. The results were extremely melancholy: muted colors, indistinct forms.
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Discussion

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"Ahhhh! My hat sucks!"

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#2 posted by Zombie , June 20, 2008 1:17 PM

I had the benefit of seeing the Capuchin tomb in Rome. It is beautiful the respect this order has for death.

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been there. Incredibly creepy, especially the infants. Apparently all the corpses were treated with arsenic as a preservative, which is why they are in relatively good condition. The Caputin monks also have a site in Rome chock full of bones, no corpses.

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#4 posted by Takuan , June 20, 2008 1:23 PM

a fitting metaphor for organized religion

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It's a Lich!

Or maybe just a barrow wight. I could never get those straight . . .

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#6 posted by Anselm , June 20, 2008 1:27 PM

Someone needs to macro that picture.

om nom nom nom

I can has cheezeburger?

I can see for ever!

Anyone, anyone? I'm at work and can't do it myself.

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Apparently all the corpses were treated with arsenic as a preservative

Did you catch that Tak-kun? No snacking!

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#8 posted by Takuan , June 20, 2008 1:55 PM

not even a little jerky?

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...and backstage at Leonard Cohen's comeback tour...


god i love cabinet.

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Went there on a school trip, in my teens. Interesting and retty damn creepy. And kitsch, and silly, and tasteless, all the other things you kind of expect from catholicism.

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#11 posted by fennel , June 20, 2008 4:04 PM

I think I saw footage of this during the opening sequence of Werner Herzog's Nosferatu... scared the crap out of me more than anything else in the film.

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Unicorn, stat!

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#13 posted by Anonymous , June 21, 2008 8:16 AM

The town of Guanajuato (birthplace of Diego Rivera) has mummies as well.

http://www.pbase.com/zymans/the_mummies_of_guanajuato

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#2, Zombie (and everyone else):

Some pictures of the Rome crypt.

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