Photos: Prince Albert and family reignite traditions at Sainte Dévote celebrations

Sainte Dévote

Sainte Dévote, the treasured patron saint of the Principality of Monaco, was honoured over the weekend with two days of special events that included well-attended religious masses commemorating her Christian legacy and the ever-popular burning of the boat ceremony.  

Monaco began its Sainte Dévote celebrations at 10.30am on Friday 26th January with a traditional mass conducted in the Monegasque language at the Eglise Sainte Dévote. 

Then, as evening drew in and the crowds started to gather on the square in front of the church, a replica of the boat that is said to have brought the body of Sainte Dévote to Monaco’s shores from Corsica arrived at the Vallon des Gaumates, where the holy relics of the young saint were blessed. 

A replica of the boat that brought Sainte Dévote’s body to the Principality of Monaco marked the start of the public festivities on Friday 26th January. Photo credit: Eric Mathon / Palais Princier de Monaco

This act signified the start of the procession towards Place Sainte Dévote, where the Archbishop of Monaco, Dominique-Marie David, oversaw the Salvation of the Most Holy Sacrament in the presence of Cardinal François-Xavier Bustillo, the Bishop of Ajaccio, as well as the Princely family.  

The burning of the boat 

The day’s focal event would soon follow, unfolding on Quai Albert Ier as a keen crowd of spectators watched on.  

Here, Prince Albert, Princess Charlene and their nine-year-old children, Prince Jacques and Princess Gabriella, took centre stage as they brandished the torches that set alight the symbolic boat that played such an important role in the story of Sainte Dévote’s martyrdom and journey to the Principality.  

A large crowd assembled on Quai Albert Ier to witness a moment of Monegasque history and heritage. Photo credit: Eric Mathon / Palais Princier de Monaco

The evening concluded with a vibrant pyro-melodic fireworks display, adding a celebratory note to the day’s solemn proceedings.  

Music and mass at the Cathédrale Notre-Dame-Immaculée 

The second day dedicated to honouring Saint Dévote saw Saturday 27th January blend the spiritual with the cultural in a series of events within the Cathédrale Notre-Dame-Immaculée. 

The day’s observances commenced with a traditional mass presided over by Cardinal François-Xavier Bustillo, which was reverently attended by Monaco’s most high-profile residents, including Prince Albert II and Princess Charlene.  

To the delight of the many gathered outside the cathedral, the Princely couple paused for a few minutes on the steps to smile and wave for the cameras before heading inside.  

Later, a procession of Sainte Dévote’s relics departed the cathedral for the Palais Princier de Monaco, where Prince Albert and Princess Charlene made another public appearance on the balcony. Watching on as the procession passed through the Place du Palais, the pair were sure to greet the crowds who had made the trip up to the iconic square for the special occasion.

See more: World-famous Tenebrae Choir heading to Monaco for candlelit concert later this month

The annual event was brought to a serene close that evening, again at the cathedral, as London’s Tenebrae Choir joined the students of the Académie Rainier III for a touching candlelit concert that beautifully matched the two days of celebrations and commemorations.  

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Photo credit: Eric Mathon / Palais Princier de Monaco

Grimaldi Forum to explore ‘Turner’s Sublime Legacy’ in collaborative exhibit with the Tate

This summer, the Grimaldi Forum, in collaboration with the Tate and its Senior Project Curator Elizabeth Brooke, will present a retrospective on the great British artist J.M.W. Turner, who is known for his dramatic use of colour, intense landscapes and turbulent marine paintings.  

Joseph Mallord William Turner was a prolific albeit reclusive and somewhat eccentric English artist of the early 19th century. His style incorporated vivid colour and a dreamlike quality that made him one of the most sought-after painters of his time. 

He was seemingly inexhaustible, putting out an incredible 550 oil paintings, 2,000 watercolour pieces and 30,000 works on paper in his lifetime, if not more. When Turner died, of cholera and in relative poverty and squalor at the age of 76, many were bequeathed to the National Gallery, now the Tate Britain. 

Summer exhibition: ‘Turner’s Sublime Legacy’

Between 6th July and 1st September, Monaco’s Grimaldi Forum will dedicate the entirety of its vast 2,000m2 of space within the Espace Ravel to the works of this noteworthy artist in an exhibition entitled ‘Turner’s Sublime Legacy’.  

See more: Grimaldi Forum toasts success at annual Galette des Rois celebration

According to the organisers, it will be “an invitation to a journey through Joseph Mallord William Turner’s representations of the world in a sublime mode, from his landscapes to the elementary explorations of light and atmosphere of which he was a pioneer and master”. 

Curated by Elizabeth Brooke, Senior Project Curator at the Tate, the show will also feature “interpretations of the sublime” by today’s great artists, including Richard Long, Olafur Eliasson, Cornelia Parker, Jessica Warboys, John Akomfrah, Katie Paterso and Mark Rothko, to name a few.  

Presale tickets to the exhibition are already on sale and can be reserved here until 7th June. More information about exhibition can be found here

Click on the video below to see a teaser of the exhibition:

 

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Joseph Mallord William Turner, The Angel Standing in the Sun © Tate