Source: The Cloisters, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Niclaus of Haguenau
Saint Anthony Abbot

ca. 1445
Walnut
Metropolitan Museum of Art

Information provided by the museum:

Attributed to Niclaus of Haguenau (German, ca. 1445—before 1538)
German; Made in Strasbourg, Upper Rhine Valley
Walnut; H. 44 3/4 in. (113.7 cm)
The Cloisters Collection, 1988 (1988.159)
The legend of St. Anthony Abbot, a fourth-century Egyptian hermit, tells of how he heroically resisted the devil's torments. Here he conquers victorious over the devil, who writhes under his feet. The saint's staff originally would have impaled the monster's mouth. St. Anthony's order was founded in Europe in the eleventh century and was dedicated to the care of the sick. The Antonites had two hospitals in Alsace—at Isenheim and at Strasbourg—and this powerful and dignified figure may have belonged to one of them. Carved in the round, it may have been carried in procession and, when at rest, housed in an altar shrine.

More of St. Anthony Abbot
Source: Metropolitan Museum of Art