The Dead Christ or The Redeemer in Death is a statue of Jesus Christ executed in white Carrara marble by the Irish sculptor John Hogan (1800–1858).
[1] The work was first sculpted by Hogan when he was based in Rome, alongside other artists such as sculptor Bertel Thorvaldsen (1770–1844).
[2] Thorvaldsen reputedly described the statue as Hogan's "masterpiece".
[3] In all, Hogan carved three versions of the statue in marble: A fourth statue, a plaster cast, is on display in the Crawford Art Gallery in Cork, Ireland.
It was acquired from Hogan's widow, Cornelia Bevigani, by William Horatio Crawford.