5. Images and Christianity

Introduction

Christianity in the early centuries inherits from Judaism the refusal to worship images of any kind and tries to differentiate itself from the Greco-roman cults. From the third and fourth centuries on, however, images multiply and their use generates a variety of controversies. At the end of the sixth century, Pope Gregory I (590-604) supports its use as a "book for the illiterate”. This turn of phrase is to be taken in all its subtlety as the often complex iconography concentrates far more on reminding topics of sermons that the faithful could recall than directly on teaching. Images are also supposed to elicit emotions. After the Second Council of Nicaea (787), the Latin Church chooses to take a middle way opposing both iconoclasm and the image worship advocated by the Byzantine Church. Then, in answer to the Protestant Reformation, the Council of Trent (1563) reasserts the legitimacy of images and the possibility to, through them, represent and honor the saints in places of worship. Objects of devotion, ornamentation, silent preaching… the forms and functions of visual arts changed with ages and styles, very often seeking inspiration in biblical narratives and Christian legends. During the twentieth century, religious art still finds in the aesthetic modernity, including in abstract art, a place to express itself, while the Christ figure is far from disappearing from contemporary art.
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1.a Christ as the good shepherd

This statuette from the Late Roman Empire can be seen as a christic interpretation of a much older type of figure. A young smooth-faced shepherd with curly hair, dressed in a short tunic, carries on his shoulders a lamb whose coat and raised head are finely chiseled. The motif of the shepherd-king, an old one in Near East literature, is often revisited in the Bible as a way to describe the Lord’s relationship with his people. In the iconography of the Antiquity, representations of the Good Shepherd symbolize philanthropy or allude to the musician shepherd Orpheus who came back from the underworld. The theme of the shepherd carrying a ram on his shoulders is also used to represent Hermes in his role as conductor of souls. Early Christian art borrows this pagan depiction to illustrate the motif of Christ the Pastor and the theme of redemption; such an iconography can be found on the walls of the catacombs or on sarcophagi. In the Gospels, the messianic figure of the Good Shepherd represents Jesus, who not only goes looking for the lost animal (Mt 18, 12) and brings it back on his shoulders (Luke 15: 3-7), but also gives his life for his sheep (Jn 10, 15).

Early Christian sculpture. Vatican Museum (Rome).
Wikimedia Commons. Usable under the conditions of the GNU Free Documentation License:
http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html
Public domain Image under URL: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/..
(08/12/2014)

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1.b The Crucifixion

During the first centuries, crucifixion images are rare. In the Romanesque period, Christ, conqueror of death, appears, in all his glory, on the cross. But this symbol of the heinous torture is also, for Christians, the symbol for redemption. Gradually, and starting during the eleven and twelfth centuries, the sacrificial theme becomes predominant and Christ is depicted as a suffering man, like in this gold-washed panel of a portable altarpiece from an unknown Florentine painter. The body of Christ, which is only covered with a thin perizoma (loincloth), seems to be collapsing on the wood of the cross, his head falls to the side, his closed eyes and bloody wound indicates his passing. Placed symmetrically on either side of the cross, flanked by the holy women and the soldiers, the Virgin Mary and John, the beloved disciple, both express sorrow and resignation. The way the bright colors contrast and the clothes delicately drape the figures adds to the expressiveness of the scene. In the background, the soldier with the aureola could be the centurion Longinus, who pierced the side of Christ with his lance and exclaimed "truly this man was the son of God" (Mk 15, 39). The redeeming blood trickles along the cross onto the skull that reminds us of Adam's death. The crucifixion on Golgotha (place of the skull) turns Christ into as a new Adam saving mankind.

Master of the Codex of Saint George (active Florence, ca. 1315–35). Painted ca. 1330–35.
Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York City, NY).
license OASC: http://www.metmuseum.org/research/image-resources
Image under URL: http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/61.200.1 (08/12/2014)

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1.c Christ in majesty

The tympanum of the central portal on the Chartres Cathedral’s west facade was built in the 1150s, it predates the reconstruction of the building during the thirteeth century. It’s a Christ in Majesty set in a mandorla, sitting on a throne and flanked by the symbols of the four evangelists. This representation of the Glory of Christ can be found on the tympanum of several cathedrals, carved in high relief, she welcomes the faithful with a profession of faith. Christ the savior is the master of the universe. On each side, the evangelists are represented in a symbolic manner through an allusion to the four living creatures of Ezekiel’s vision (Ez 1: 1-14): a man, a lion and a bull, all three sporting wings, and an eagle. Attributions have changed with the interpretations offered by the patristics to settle on one. In it, Matthew, who opens his gospel with a genealogy, is associated with the figure of the man; Marc, who writes about preaching in the wilderness, is the lion; the bull stands for Luke, who begins with the sacrificial theme; and finally John, who addresses the highest levels of the celestial realms, is represented by the eagle. According to some theologians, one can also read it as a symbol for Christ: man by birth, bull by his bloody sacrifice, lion by his resurrection, and eagle by his ascension.


Chartres cathedral. Tympanum of the central gate of the Royal Gates (12th c.).
Wikimedia Commons. Usable under the conditions of the GNU Free Documentation License:
http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html
Public domain Image under URL:
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Chartres_Portail_central_Tympan_270309_1.jpg (08/12/2014)

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2.a Madonna and Child

The Mother of God, Theotokos, as is the title bestowed upon her by the Council of Ephesus in 431, is represented on a golden background illustrating the radiance of the divine world. Her head and her shoulders are covered with a maphorion (veil) lined with a red braid. The three gold stars, one on the forehead and one on each shoulder (with only one visible here) remind us of her virginity before, during, and after the birth of the Savior her son. With her right hand, she points to the Child Jesus as the road to follow. The latter, one hand holding a roll and the other set in the gesture of the latin blessing (index and middle finger jointed close together, the otherfingers folded), displays a gravity befitting a master of wisdom. This representation by an Italian artist from the early thirteenth century still follows very closely the codes governing the Byzantine icons that spread through Italy after the fall of Constantinople (1204). Our Lady of the Way (the Virgin hodegetria) is one of the main types of Madonna, with the Virgin of Tenderness, the Praying Virgin, and the Madonna of Majesty (the Maestà) from which many variations derive. Subtle nuances in the pleats of the clothes and the stretching of the hands reflect the perfection of Berlinghiero’s style.

Berlinghiero (active by 1228 – died by 1236). Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York City, NY). license OASC: http://www.metmuseum.org/research/image-resources
Image under URL: http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/60.173 (08/12/2014)

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2.b Virgin and Child

Leader of the Seville school, Murillo is, with Zurbarán and Velazquez, one of the masters of Spanish Baroque painting. In addition to religious themes, he painted many genre scenes and his rendering of this Virgin and Child is at the crossroads between the sacred and the profane. The characters, depicted with the realism expected of a scene of family intimacy, stand out against a dark background, surrounded by a bright halo which makes up for the absence of aureola or of any other explicitly religious symbol. A piece of blue cloth is a reminder of the colour associated with the queen of heaven, who is here dressed in the red of passion. The mother casts a tender look upon her chubby and playful child whom she seems to be presenting to the faithful, and the latter directs his gaze to the audience as if he just discovered their presence. The Madonnas of Murillo were very popular and have frequently been used again in devotional images.

Bartolomé Estebán Murillo (Seville 1617 – 1682 Seville). Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York City, NY). license OASC: http://www.metmuseum.org/research/image-resources
Image under URL: http://www.metmuseum.org/collection/the-collection-online/search/437175 (08/12/2014)

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3.a The Lamentation

Scipione Pulzone, who was close to the Jesuits, painted this altarpiece for a chapel of the Church of Gesù in Rome, the Passion of Christ Chapel. Between the Descent from the Cross and the Entombment, the theme of the lamentations over the dead Christ has grown into a marked devotion to the reality of an incarnation going as far as the trial that death is. The composition places Jesus' body in the foreground, laid on his mother's lap and supported by Joseph of Arimathea, while John holds the crown of thorns. The deathly pallor of the body, that lays languid but barely marked with a few drops of blood at the wounds, contrasts with the bright colors of the blue and red coats worn by the figures around it. Christ before his burial thus gives the faithful a reason to meditate and to share the emotion of the crying holy women or of Madeleine, with her long golden hair, who, sitting at the feet of her Lord, seems immersed in her grief. In the background, the first rays of dawn pierce already under the clouds and raise the hope for the resurrection.

The Lamentation (1593). Scipione Pulzone (Il Gaetano) (Gaeta, active by 1569 – died 1598 Rome).
Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York City, NY).
license OASC: http://www.metmuseum.org/research/image-resources
Image under URL: http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/1984.74 (08/12/2014).

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3.b Isaac blessing Jacob

This scene from the book of Genesis (Gen. 27, 20-29) presents the moment when Patriarch Isaac, now nearly blind, blesses Jacob who, with the complicity of his mother, is impersonating his older brother with the help of a fur glove over his hand. Rebecca's impressive figure to the right of the painting also seems to be giving her blessing to Jacob's cunning. On a table in the foreground to the right, the remains of a meal make up a still life alluding to the young goat Isaac ate instead of the venison that Esau was to bring him back. In the background, on the left side of the painting, one can make out the return of the man who had sold his birthright for a dish of lentils. Gerbrand van den Eeckout, who studied under Rembrandt's tutelage places this key moment of Jacob's story in a setting and in costumes that are contemporary to his patrons. In a style inspired by his master, he fits into the taste that his time had for biblical subjects in private art.

Isaac Blessing Jacob (1642). Gerbrand van den Eeckhout (Amsterdam 1621 – 1674 Amsterdam). Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York City, NY). license OASC: http://www.metmuseum.org/research/image-resources Image under URL: http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/25.110.16 (08/12/2014)