Spanish sculpture of the 17th and 18th centuries exhibits a greater continuity with late Gothic art than does the painting; and the Counter-Reformation demands for realism and an emotional stimulus to piety led to sculpture with glass eyes, human hair, and even real fabric costumes. Italian Renaissance sculpture had made a very limited impact in Spain, and with few exceptions this was in the court ambience only, while Spanish Baroque sculpture is almost entirely religious and of a fundamentally popular nature. Gregorio Hernández in sculptures like the Pieta (1617) revealed an emotional realism more Gothic than Baroque; but in the ...(100 of 41048 words)