Restored fresco of Jesus. Ecce Homo: the ruined fresco that saved the city (6 photos)

04.03.2020

The word "restoration" comes from the Latin "restauratio", which means "restoration". It will not work just like that to tint or cover up, otherwise the cultural monument may be damaged and even destroyed.

One of the textbook examples of incorrect restoration is the restoration of the Parthenon at the beginning of the 20th century. They wanted the best, they tried, but the wrong materials, the wrong tools, not very careful work with the wreckage. As a result, some of the objects were destroyed, not restored. Almost a hundred years have passed since then, and ... nothing has changed.

Matter word

Matrera Castle (El castillo de Matrera), IX century.

Matrera Castle beautifully, although not very reliably guarded the expanses of the Spanish province of Cadiz from the 9th century until 2013, when heavy rains (and tourists) led to the collapse of the central tower. Local authorities urgently attended to the repair of the national monument. Three years later, the castle was unrecognizable: beautiful, new! And ... in March 2016, a scandal erupted.

This is a new word in restoration, and this word is obscene. The locals mentioned to them both the authorities and the restorers, and then specialists took over the job, having lost an important object of research. The restorers themselves explained that all the requirements of Spanish law were met. Their result is safe to visit, shows the original size of the tower, the textures and colors of the original materials, and clearly separates the preserved elements from the remake. For this work, the architect even received a professional award.

And in 2002, the builders managed to demolish the house of Isidore of Madrid, the patron saint of the Spanish capital, which had stood there for about nine hundred years. It seems that these Spaniards have a grandfather working at the old castle factory. They have these old castles well, just heaps. Here they take down anything.

"Fluffy Jesus"

Fresco Ecce Homo ("Behold the Man"), 1910

And again we will talk about Spain. One of the few sights of the small town of Borja was the fresco Ecce Homo ("Behold the Man") by Elias Garcia Martinez depicting Jesus Christ in the crown of thorns.

In 2010, 83-year-old parishioner Cecilia Jimenez, with the consent of the rector, took up the restoration of the fresco, which, although it was the same age as the "artist" and (also?) began to crumble, it still looked better. This had to be corrected.

The result became public in 2012 and exceeded all expectations. Witty people began to call the fresco "Fluffy Jesus" or Ecce Mono ("Behold the monkey"). The old woman explained her creative vision by her lack of experience and disgusting lighting in the church. The rector of the church, frowning, was silent.

There is no bad without good. The fresco in its original state was of interest only to art historians, but “Fluffy Jesus” attracted literally crowds of tourists to the town, providing local residents and Cecilia herself with work, the church with income from visits, and those who like to laugh with a huge number of caricatures and fotozhab.

barber of cairo

Funeral mask of Tutankhamun, 1323 BC

The broken nose of the sphinx was not enough for the Egyptians. In the summer of 2014, in the process of moving exhibits at the Cairo Museum, Tutankhamen's priceless funerary mask somehow fell off his beard. To solve the problem, one of the workers came up with the idea to glue everything back, but more securely. And what could be more reliable than epoxy resin?

Carefully, of course, it did not work out, and the would-be restorer, out of school habit, scraped off the drops of glue with a scalpel, leaving beautiful and noticeable scratches on the pressed gold. By the way, before this procedure, the beard was separated from the mask and attached to a special sleeve, which could be restored without much difficulty.

Alas, epoxy resin can only be separated with a layer of metal, and historians are not yet ready to go for this. However, it is possible that during the next transfer the mask will be dropped again and the beard will break off again ... The main thing is that they do not repair it themselves.

True, there was some good news. Scientists very carefully examined the mask for other damage and found that with a high degree of probability it was originally intended for Nefertiti. Unless, of course, this inscription with a felt-tip pen is original ...

Sponge Bob in the style of "Minecraft"

Fortress Ocakli Ada Kalesi, I-II centuries.

Turkish resorts do not tolerate dilapidation, so in 2010 the authorities of the Istanbul suburb of Şile decided to restore the two thousand-year-old Byzantine fortress, picturesquely sprawled on a coastal island.

In August 2015, the restoration led to a trial in the Turkish parliament and an investigation, and foreign tourists, as if by agreement, began to compare the fortress with SpongeBob SquarePants. Why not? Many resort towns can be called "Bikini Bottom". Schiele is now in the forefront of the renaming.

The municipal workers themselves indignantly explained to journalists that it was a shame to look at the crumbling fortress, and now it is like new ... I mean, really new.

Funny pictures

Frescoes in the temple complex of Yongzhi, XVIII-XIX centuries.

The municipal authorities of the Chaoyang District simply did not have enough money for professional restorers for the Yongzhi Temple Complex. Or maybe they chose the restorers on the principle of "whose kung fu is better." Yes, and too lazy to follow the progress of work. What is there to watch? It's just a room with frescoes, not Comrade Mao's house-museum.

As a result, in 2013, instead of restored frescoes from the Qing Dynasty, visitors to the temple saw bright but sloppy scenes from Buddhist legends that have nothing to do with the original drawings.

Those responsible were fired, but after this “restoration”, restoring the old frescoes, if at all possible, costs significantly more than the amount saved. By the way, that rare case when the head of the regional party cell was reprimanded for damaging religious objects.

castrated tree

Fresco "Tree of Fertility" (l "Albero della Fecondità), 1265

In 2011, several restorers were accused of censoring a 700-year-old Roman fresco of The Tree of Fertility by removing several dangling phalluses from the painting. Journalists called the tree castrated.

The restorers themselves did not deny the disappearance of organs, stating that if something was dissolved during the cleaning process, it was completely by accident, since the fresco was in very poor condition. And in general, who cares how much was hanging there initially? And after all, someone was not too lazy, he thought that exactly 25 hung before the restoration. Yes, the head of the local cell of the Communist Party was not injured.

Illuminated thoughts

Painting by Leonardo da Vinci "Madonna and Child with Saint Anne", 1508-1510.

Repeatedly, the leadership of the Louvre was offered to clean the da Vinci painting, but until 2011 it was impregnable. However, the water wears away the stone, and the solvent in the meantime brightens the picture. When the result became visible, the British restorers began to claim that they had discovered the true artistic design of da Vinci, and the Louvre authorities opened a vial of valerian. It was officially stated that the result was satisfactory, but two members of the advisory The committee that oversaw the work on the painting resigned in protest. Experts are still arguing about the acceptability of such a restoration.

Strange Angel

"House of the sad angel", St. Petersburg, 1906

Profitable house of Panteleimon Badaev is known both to Petersburgers and tourists. Moreover, at the World Exhibition in Paris, he was awarded a gold medal. Here, not every person receives a medal, and the house is rarely like that at all. Unfortunately, the medal bearer did not survive the war in all its splendor: a shell hit him. After repairs in the 50s, the Art Nouveau house became a communal apartment, which also had a bad effect on its condition.

In 2013, the house decided to restore. Suddenly, historians noticed that one of the parts of the bas-relief, depicting the nymph of music, changed in the face.

The organizers of the repair claimed that no restoration of the bas-relief was carried out, and in this form it came to them initially, but they also did not undertake to restore it. They don't own talent. The authors of the “masterpiece”, who worked on the appearance of the house somewhere between 2008 and 2013, were never found, and the locals called it the “steppe maiden”. The steppe maidens, in turn, call the changed nymph "a native Petersburger".

Saturn Mercury is almost invisible

Trading House Kuznetsov, Moscow, 1898

In August 2015, Moscow was preparing for the city's birthday, and Myasnitskaya Street received a very strange gift.

The face of the god Mercury on the bas-relief of the Kuznetsov Trading House miraculously changed. Most decided that the legendary restorer of the Badaev house had come on tour to Moscow, although perhaps the god of trade was skewed by the prices he saw for repairs in Moscow. Like it or not, the damage was done, and the authorities promised to return it as it was. Or at least find a prettier sitter.

Admiralty Freaks

Admiralty building, St. Petersburg, 1823

In 2011, when examining the tower of the main building of the Admiralty, the restorers discovered the most interesting creations that could be attributed to any genre, except for classicism. Of the 28 antique figures, only one remained close to its original form, and the rest ...

The restoration of the fresco Ecce Homo (“Behold the Man”) is far from the only example of unsuccessful restoration in our time. Not so long ago, the Louvre was accused of poor-quality restoration of Leonardo da Vinci's painting "Saint Anna with the Madonna and the Christ Child" (1510), after which both restorers filed an application to leave the museum.

In the Prado Museum, during the restoration of El Greco's painting "Portrait of a Cavalier with a Hand on His Chest" (1577-1579), the name of the artist at the bottom of the painting was erased.

Until now, the palm belonged to the former Prime Minister of Italy Silvio Berlusconi, who "sewn" the missing body parts to Venus and Mars (). Then art experts called this act tasteless and aesthetically incorrect, and some even equated Berlusconi's decision with vandalism.

On August 21, a small article appeared in the Spanish edition of Heraldo, which reported how horribly a resident of the small town of Borja restored the fresco Ecce Homo, painted by the artist Elias Garcia Martinez and located in the Temple of Mercy. Before that, the name of Cecilia Jimenez was unknown to anyone, just as, however, few knew about the existence of the city of Borja with a population of only 5,000 inhabitants and about the picture itself, which the whole world is now talking about.

The story of the "most terrible restoration" was picked up by all the world's media, and it turned into a real triumph for the author of the fresco. After all, until that moment the name of the artist Elias Garcia Martinez was known only to a narrow circle of specialists. He was born in the municipality of Requena in 1858, where he began to draw, then studied painting at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts of Saint Carlos, then went to Barcelona, ​​and after it to Zaragoza. In Zaragoza, the artist married, taught at the School of Art. There he died.

The artistic value of the fresco is not very great, but the locals appreciated it. She did not leave indifferent and Cecilia. According to her, the constantly deteriorating state of the fresco, caused by high humidity in the room, made her very upset. That's when the idea of ​​restoration came up.

Now, however, the “restorer” assures that the idea to restore the painting did not belong to her, but to the priest: “The priest, of course, knew about this. Of course, I worked because I was asked to. Of course, everyone knew what I was doing. When people came to church, they saw me drawing. The pastor knew. How could I do such things without permission?”

But representatives of the church insist that they knew nothing about the artistic work of their elderly parishioner. According to them, she independently decided to restore it and started work in 2010. It is hard to believe that all these two years no one paid attention to what the woman was doing, despite the fact that a security guard is constantly on duty in the church.

Cecilia Jimenez has been drawing since early childhood. And this, by the way, is not the first time she restores paintings for her native village, but so far there have been no complaints about her.

“I have many works, some better, others worse, but they are all made with great love,” says Cecilia in an interview with a Spanish journalist El Mundo. She organized solo exhibitions more than once, and in her entire creative career she even managed to sell about 40 paintings.

When the scandal broke, Cecilia was on vacation, and when she returned to Borja, she was unpleasantly surprised. Surprise was replaced by depression. Such close attention to her own person and fierce criticism did not go unnoticed for her - soon there were reports in the press that the woman had depression, she refused to eat and did not want to get out of bed. “If you think that I have sinned by doing this, then I ask your forgiveness ... I ask your forgiveness ...”

Cecilia's life was extremely difficult. She became a widow early and had to raise two disabled children. One of them died, and the other, 60-year-old, lives with her to this day. The woman has always preferred loneliness and led a reclusive lifestyle.

“She went to mass every day and helped in the church, like other women in the village. She painted simple pictures with flowers and landscapes... she led a very modest life,” says one of Cecilia's acquaintances.

“I do not regret that I started the restoration. I regret that I could not finish it to the end, ”says Cecilia herself.

As a result of its restoration, Jesus now looks more like a monkey: the crown of thorns and hair resemble fur, the eyes and nose are deformed, and the mouth is a patch of incomprehensible shape. The result of the work was discovered by the employees of the center for the protection of monuments, who received a charitable contribution for the restoration of the fresco from the great-granddaughter of Elias Garcia Martinez.

“I could not imagine that everything would end like this. I didn’t want this,” Cecilia justifies herself. The woman claims that she used only the best paints: “I myself paint my paintings with them.”

The courageous act of a parishioner of the Church of Mercy caused an information storm all over the world. Both journalists and social networks did not disregard this initiative of Senora Jimenez.

Some attacked the old woman with the most severe criticism, others defended the elderly Spaniard, calling her the new Goya, Munch and Modigliani in one person.

There was even a petition on change.org in defense of the restored Jesus, which has already received more than 10,000 signatures. The petitioners state the following: “Spanish cultural figures want to remake Elias García Martínez’ radical reworking of the clichéd image of Christ<...>. This is a huge mistake as the new image is a cultural treasure and should be preserved.”

The creation of an elderly Spanish woman in just a few hours has become one of the most popular Internet memes. In Madrid, in the San Miguel market, they even made a pancake with an edible image of a fresco restored beyond recognition.

The inhabitants of the town are very grateful to Cecilia for the fact that, thanks to her, their hometown appeared on the world map. “She is a good person, this situation broke her. We must not forget that Cecilia is an elderly person, and we all advised her to avoid contact with the press. It's normal that she tries to defend herself, but everything ends with her arguing with our priest, with Elias Garcia's family and, as a result, she suffers a lot,” says one of Cecilia's neighbors.

“We should all support her and decided that each of us would bring a flower to Cecilia's garden. In this way, we will express our support for her,” says another.

“I am very grateful to all the residents of Borja. I feel their support and love,” says Cecilia.

The restored fresco attracted a large number of tourists to the city. Hundreds of curious people lined up at the Temple of Mercy. To avoid damage to the fresco due to the influx of tourists, guards were posted next to it.

Seeing such a hype, the city authorities now want to officially register the Ecce Homo brand and issue all rights.

But at the same time, the city council of the city does not exclude that a criminal case will be opened against the old woman for illegal actions in relation to a cultural heritage site. However, representatives of the city administration admit that this situation is rather “delicate”.

Many government officials also came to Cecilia's defense. “We think she did it with the best of intentions. Next week, she will meet with the restorer and explain what materials she used,” cultural adviser Juan Maria Ojeda told El Pais.

The final decision on the restoration will be made not earlier than in two weeks.

On August 21, a small article appeared in the Spanish edition of Heraldo, which talked about how terrible a resident of the small town of Borja, an 80-year-old pensioner, restored the mural "Ecce Homo" ("Behold the Man"), painted by artist Elias Garcia Martinez. Photos of the fresco depicting Jesus Christ before and after the restoration were attached to the publication. On the updated version of the work, Christ was unrecognizable - the fresco began to resemble a child's drawing depicting either a monkey or a fluffy potato with eyes.

After the publication in Heraldo around the act of Cecilia Jimenez, who decided to restore the fresco, which, according to various sources, dates from the late XIX - early XX century, a real scandal erupted. Some attacked the old woman with the most severe criticism, while others defended the elderly Spaniard, proclaiming her the new Munch and Modigliani in one person. Be that as it may, the image of Jesus Christ created by Jimenez seems to have already taken its niche in modern art.

Cecilia Jimenez told reporters that she started working on the restoration of the "Ecce Homo" fresco, located on a church column, a few years ago. According to the parishioner of the church, she was upset by the state of the work, which deteriorated due to humidity in the premises of the religious building.

The pensioner, as she herself claims, turned to the priest, and he allegedly agreed that she should carry out restoration work. "Of course, everyone knew about what I was doing. When people came to church, they saw what I was drawing. The rector knew. How could I do such things without permission?", Jimenez was quoted by the media. At the same time, representatives of the church claim that they knew nothing about the artistic work of their elderly parishioner.

One way or another, the restoration, begun in 2010, was completed in the summer of 2012. The results of Cecilia Jimenez's work came to light a couple of weeks ago, when specialists arrived at the church to assess the state of the fresco depicting Christ in order to draw up a restoration plan. The restoration was to be done at the expense of the granddaughter of the author of the fresco Teresa Martinez - it was she who allocated the money and sent it to the church.

Arriving in Borja, the experts found something completely different instead of a fresco - a primitive image of a certain creature with a fur-covered head (as an option - dressed in a woolen bonnet), sadly turned to the side. Staring down at the experts from the mural was, BBC News wrote, "a pencil sketch of a very hairy monkey in a baggy tunic." Only this dimensionless tunic reminded of the original appearance of "Ecce Homo" - both before and after the restoration it was beetroot color (by the way, as Teresa Martinez noted, Cecily Jimenez's tunic did not come out as badly as everything else). The church in Borja promised that the fluffy Jesus would disappear - the fresco is planned to be restored again, this time by professionals.

After the news spread in the English-language press about the most unsuccessful restoration in the history of art, a campaign was launched on the Web to save the fluffy Jesus (bloggers have already managed to give Jimenez's work a new name - "Ecce Mono", which they translated as "Behold the monkey"). Of course, the creation of an elderly Spaniard in just a few hours has become one of the most popular Internet memes - you can find "phototoads" for fluffy Jesus without particularly straining.

A petition appeared on change.org in defense of the restored Jesus. The author of the updated version of the old fresco is compared with Goya, Munch and Modigliani, and in the work itself they see criticism of the "creationist theories" of the Church. At the time of this writing, more than ten thousand people have voted for the preservation of "Ecce Mono". Perhaps they are all right in their desire to recognize the furry Jesus as a work of art in its own right.

Goya is not Goya, but the fresco by Cecilia Jimenez can be called an interesting example of primitivist painting (if we abstract from the existence of the original version). Primitivism as a painting style was born around the time when García Martinez, following academic traditions, painted the walls of a small church in Borja; now the works of the greatest primitivists, such as Niko Pirosmani and Henri Rousseau, hang in museums and cost a lot of money. There is nothing to say about the avant-garde artists who experimented with this style and turned to it, unlike the Spanish grandmother, absolutely consciously.

In this story, Cecilia Jimenez showed herself, of course, not Pirosmani, but definitely a grandiose popularizer who gave the world knowledge. "The most terrible restoration" turned into a real triumph for the artist Elias Garcia Martinez, whom no one in the world knew until that moment. Born in the municipality of Requena in 1858, he began to draw there, then studied painting at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts of Saint Carlos, then went to Barcelona and after it to Zaragoza. There he got married, taught, painted, died - in a word, nothing impressive. The most interesting page in the artist's biography was the creation of a fresco depicting Jesus, who turned into a monkey in the 21st century.

The fact that the updated fresco will be useful was probably already understood in the church itself, which in recent days has been receiving inquisitive tourists on an enhanced basis. And they can be understood - there are a lot of canonical images of Christ, and only one in a bonnet.

In his article, The Guardian art critic Jonathan Jones rightly notes that a devout pensioner could make a career in the comic genre. Her act can only be compared with the restoration of the portrait of James Whistler's mother, made by the famous Mr. Bean, who literally sneezed on the picture, and then, in horror, put it in order. The gift of comic destruction must also be possessed, and by using it wisely, it is now possible to build a whole strategy for popularizing art. Jones, however, advises paying attention to more worthy specimens - to paintings by old masters, or, well, to the frescoes of the early Renaissance in the Palazzo Schifanoia.

A Spanish pensioner tried to restore on her own a 19th-century fresco - one of the main attractions of the local church. The result was disastrous.
A fresco by Elias Garcia Martinez depicting Jesus Christ has been the decoration of a church near Zaragoza for more than a hundred years.
Art Over the years, she received some damage: some of the fragments were erased due to high humidity in the room, in some places the paint crumbled.
Then an 80-year-old woman brought paints to the church and added the missing details.
According to BBC correspondent Christian Fraser, instead of the Savior, the fresco turned out to be something like a hairy monkey in a shapeless tunic. Martinez's delicate work was hidden by crudely applied paint.
The parishioner soon realized she had ruined the old work and contacted the local council, who hope to have the fresco restored.
The image of the "restored" fresco spread around the world and attracted the attention of thousands of Internet users.
“I am very glad that my church and my city became known to the whole world thanks to me, although this was not my intention when I started to restore the fresco,” Jimenez explains.
As a result of the huge attention and mass criticism, Jimenez was acutely worried about what had happened.
“She spends every summer in the church,” explains José Maria Aznar, who is in charge of the upkeep of the church. “All these years Cecilia helped us to restore the church without any problems. At first she was afraid to touch the fresco, seeing that it was badly damaged, but one morning she took the brushes and, without discussing it, began to “restorate” it with anyone.
Although Ms. Jimenez has detractors, many people support her. Hundreds of fans sent her letters of approval.
“I want to thank you for the support I receive from all over the world,” says Jimenez. Thanks to her, I feel much better now.
“She told my wife what she had done, she said, ‘I retouched the fresco and now it looks terrible, I have to leave the city, I will leave it like that for now, but when I get back I will fix it,’ explains Aznar. “But, despite her goodwill, I, as the person in charge of the temple, had to inform the city hall of Borja.
After that, the local authorities came to the church to analyze what had happened. They later published their findings on a blog. They were posted on Facebook, and Borja and its inhabitants gained worldwide fame.
Spanish art historians are going to hold a meeting in the church to discuss the restoration plan.
Juan Maria Oeda, a member of the city's cultural council who is handling the case, said the culprit was ready to meet with experts and let them know what materials she used.
"I think she [the pensioner] acted with the best of intentions. If we fail to restore the fresco, we will hang a photo of the work on the wall of the church," Oeda said.
The artistic value of the fresco is not very great, but the locals appreciated it.
Unfortunately, the local restoration center had just received a donation from the artist's granddaughter to restore the fresco, according to a BBC correspondent.

80-year-old amateur artist Cecilia Giménez had nothing but good intentions when she turned her attention to a deteriorating mural depicting Jesus Christ on a wall in the Temple of Mercy in the small Spanish town of Borja.

The mural titled "Ecce Homo" (meaning "Behold the Man") was created by the Spanish artist Elías García Martínez in 1930. Although this work, according to the general opinion in the press, was of "little artistic value" because "Martinez is not a great artist, and his painting "Ecce Homo" is not a "masterpiece", the mural nevertheless acquired some sentimental value. among the local population.

So, when the original paint on the fresco began to peel off, Cecilia Jimenez, who had no special education, undertook to restore the aging artwork.

Damaged fresco "Ecce Homo" on the left and its "restored" version on the right.

Jimenez touched up the painting stroke by stroke for several years with the knowledge of the parish priest and church watchmen, until one day in the summer of 2012 she decided that the fresco needed a major restoration. In the middle of the "restoration process", Jimenez went on vacation because the work took much longer than she thought. The woman intended to complete it upon her return, but for better or worse, she never got the chance again.

By the time she returned from vacation, her failed efforts were known to the general public, and Jimenez had become the laughingstock of the world. The failed restoration has become a major topic on the Internet, generating many memes and jokes on the worldwide web. Journalists compared the restoration to how the famous character Mr. Bean, played by Rowan Atkinson (Rowan Atkinson), ruined the painting "Whistler's Mother" ("Whistler's Mother"). Some have compared the painting to a blurry image of a potato and a monkey. Others called her "Fluffy Jesus" and "Ecce Mono" ("Behold the Monkey").

Jimenez felt so humiliated that she cried for several days and, according to her relatives, refused to eat. As a result, the woman had to seek the help of a psychiatrist and take medication. At some point, the heirs of Garcia Martinez threatened to sue Cecilia Jimenez for damaging the painting, but, fortunately for her, did not follow through.


Original intact painting (left), damaged painting (middle) and restoration by Cecilia Jiménez (right).

Now, in a strange twist of fate, the small obscure town of Borja has suddenly appeared on the international tourist route. Every year, tens of thousands of curious visitors with a strange sense of humor come from the far corners of the world to see the tragic fiasco with their own eyes and go home with various souvenirs, such as mugs and T-shirts depicting the "new and improved" "Ecce Homo" mural.

Cecilia Jimenez, whose failed attempt to restore a church painting once drew mockery and ridicule, is now a local celebrity. She presents prizes in a competition for young artists who write their own versions of the painting "Ecce Homo". People recognize her on the street and shout: "It's Cecilia! It's Cecilia!" It even has 49% of the proceeds from the sale of souvenirs. The rest goes to the family of the artist Martinez.

Cecilia Jimenez may not have been able to restore the painting, but she managed to revive the fate of her city. The influx of tourists has helped stabilize the economy of the city of Borja, which has been reeling from the economic downturn that has plagued the rest of Spain over the past few years.

"For me, it's a story of faith," said Andrew Flack, an opera librettist who penned a comic opera about how a woman ruined a fresco and saved a city. "It's a miracle she was able to help tourism flourish!"

"Why do people come to see a mural if it is such a work of art?" he asks. "It's a kind of pilgrimage turned into a phenomenon by the media. The ways of the Lord are inscrutable. Your catastrophe may turn out to be a miracle for me."


Mr. Bean's "restored" painting by James McNeill Whistler "Arrangement in Gray and Black: The Artist's Mother" from the movie "Mr. Bean", 1997


Assortment of souvenirs "Ecce Homo".


A collection of Internet memes about the failed restoration of the "Ecce Homo" fresco.


Tourists lined up to look at a church painting "Ecce Homo" on an altar at the Temple of Mercy in Borja, Spain.



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