Via Crucis for the Fabric of Saint Peters

International Competition for the Creation of a Via Crucis for temporary exhibition in St. Peter's Basilica, winner announced

The international competition, launched by the Fabric of St. Peter last December, has concluded. The competition aimed to create a unique artistic representation in painting—a Via Crucis in fourteen stations—intended for temporary exhibition in the Papal Basilica of St. Peter in the Vatican.

Over a thousand applications were submitted by artists of all ages from eighty countries worldwide. .

A rigorous evaluation of the candidates' portfolios and CVs was carried out by a commission of experts, including art historians, liturgists, and representatives of various Vatican institutions.

A shortlist of fourteen candidates was selected. According to the competition's guidelines they had to submit a painted sketch of the twelfth station of the Via Crucis (Jesus dies on the cross) and a graphic sketch of another station, freely chosen by the artist.

The works of the thirteen finalists were submitted by the deadline to the Fabric:

Tadeusz Boruta (Poland)

Amedeo Brogli (Italy)

Marco Chiuchiarelli (Italy)

Tule Clow (United States)

Antoni Cygan (Poland)

Giuseppe De Palma (Italy)

Antonio Decinti Torrejón (Chile)

Paweł Domaszewicz (Poland)

Manuel Andreas Dürr (Switzerland)

Emanuel Farrugia (Malta)

Janusz Szpyt (Poland)

Giovanni Maria Tommasi Ferroni (Italy)

Carlos Ygoa (Philippines)

The sketches were presented to the commission in a specially prepared room within the Fabric's offices, forming an exhibition of strong visual and emotional impact.

The competition commission highly praised the sketches for their technical quality, originality, and expressive power. Due to the striking impression created by the collective display of these works—where the single subject, the crucified Christ, was represented in diverse forms reflecting the artists' personal styles—the Fabric requested each artist's permission to retain their sketches for a unified exhibition.

The competition commission unanimously declared the Swiss painter Manuel Andreas Dürr as the winner.