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Another relief, a replica of the 15th-century original, shows St. Peter surrounded by people while he is being crucified upside down. Other displays focus on tools used to create art and architecture. For instance, a caliper believed to have been Michelangelo's is on display. There are also two gilded wood angels from the workshop of Gian Lorenzo Bernini. The ornate artifacts don't end there. In the middle of one room is a gilded cross used in Mass processions, dating to the 15th century. Visitors can examine Pope Pius XI's papal throne, a creation of wood, velvet and gold-plated metal. Zagnoli, the Vatican official, said the connection between religion and art is strong
-- a point he makes by citing a passage by Russian author Fyodor Dostoyevsky that he said was often quoted by Pope John Paul II. "Beauty will save the world," Zagnoli said. "The pope was saying that seeing something beautiful can calm the hearts of man and with that tranquility he is able to put himself in dialogue with other people." ___ Online: Museum of Art Fort Lauderdale: http://moaflnsu.org/
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