Babel's works comprise about 270 objects related to 118 attested commissions, mostly sacral art. They include stone and stucco sculptures of saints and angels, mostly for church altars, models for
reliquaries and a few secular sculptures for fountains or gardens. His principal and earliest work is the statuary decoration of Einsiedeln Abbey. The choir sculptures (1746–47) elaborately illustrate the death of Christ and display an uncommonly rich variation in clothing forms, influenced by the work of Heel and Carloni. After 1750, Babel increasingly used
Rococo elements, beginning with the Allegories on the Einsiedeln main altar (1749–1751), which made him a pioneer of this style in Switzerland. The stone statues on the abbey's main square (1749–1751) illustrate the progression from late Baroque forms, as seen in the Emperor statues, to the more Rococo-like expressive gestures in the allegorical sculptures. Most of Babel's works were small- or medium-sized altar figurines in polished white
basswood. The main work of the middle period of his life are the side altars of Our Lady's Chapel in
Oberarth (1764–67), considered the most valued Rococo furnishings in Central Switzerland. These furnishings, and those in the palace chapel of
Hilfikon illustrate Babel's principal accomplishment: the transformation of Late Baroque templates into a more controlled, constrained and comprehensive form. In 1772–75, Babel created the facade, interior and fountain sculptures for the newly built
Neoclassical St. Ursen Cathedral of
Solothurn. His concessions to the emerging
Neoclassicist style remained reluctant, however. His last major work, the 1794 statue of
John of Nepomuk on the Devils's Bridge in Egg (Einsiedeln), based on a 1760
bozzetto, illustrates his unwillingness to fully adapt to the new style. == Bibliography ==