St. Francis in the Desert, 1480, Giovanni Bellini |
When you think of Christian art, the first scenes that come to mind are usually
crucifixions, or nativities, or last suppers, or maybe last judgements. If you're
particularly astute, maybe you might include in your recall an ascension, or a
good shepherd, or a specific painting such as Christ in Gethsemane or the
symbolic depiction of Him knocking at a door. Every one of these mindful
examples centers upon the figure of Jesus Christ. Aside from the Genesis
blockbuster on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, we very rarely bring to mind
anything else. Yet artists over the years have probed just about every major and
minor episode in both biblical testaments for their subject matter. It's just
that Christ invariable dominates the genre, which perhaps is the way it should
be. Yet, beyond Christ, even beyond biblical art, there is a vast body of
religious art having to do with the lives and legends of those pious men and
women whose examples of spiritual enlightenment and sanctification have inspired
artists going as far back as the development of the technical skills needed in
rendering them would allow.
St. John in the Desert, 1445, Domenico Veneziano |
One of the best examples of this type of work is Giovanni Bellini's 1480 St.
Francis in the Desert (top, left). The Venetian painter depicts St. Francis emerging from
his surprisingly domesticated cave after having received the stigmata (the
five wounds of Christ) to a heavenly light source, while behind him are the
carefully crafted rudiments of an arbored study complete with medieval study
desk, a Bible, and seat. Despite the title, there is not much in the way of
desert here. A donkey grazes in the middle ground pasture while beyond that are
the walls of a city where St. Francis preached to the urban poor. Even before
this work, dating from about 1445, we find Domenico Veneziano's St. John in
the Desert (above, right). While technically a biblical depiction, the nude figure of the
saint, as he strips himself of his worldly possessions in exchange for a single
camel hair shirt, is one of spiritual solitude, more severe than St. Francis'
relatively luxurious habitat, but no less compelling. The physique of St. John
is athletically beautiful and quite natural for its time. Only the inclusion of
the halo and the stylised desert landscape tends to relate this work more to
Medieval than Renaissance art.
St. Jerome in the Desert, 1530, Gian Girolamo Salvoldo |
In the same vein as Bellini's St. Francis, Gian Girolamo Salvoldo
depicts an aged St. Jerome in the Desert (left), kneeling before a natural
altar, his eyes fixed on a crucifix, while before him is an open Bible. In his
right hand he holds a stone used to inflict pain upon himself as penance in
hopes of achieving a closer identification with Christ. St. Jerome is best known
for having translated the Bible from Hebrew to Latin. It is a work of more
profound spiritual expression than any of the others. But it wasn't just men who
sought spiritual solitude as seen through the eyes of artists. According to the
Golden Legend, Mary Magdalene, supposedly a former prostitute, retreated to
the desert following the crucifixion and, in a manner spiritually not unlike
John the Baptist, surrendered her physical beauty in penitence for a haggard old
age. The French painter, Georges de la Tour depicts her as she contemplates her
retreat in The Penitent Magdalene (below, left, 1684) sitting at her dressing table,
long hair over her back, a skull in her lap, peering at a candle reflected in a
mirror. It's a painting as much a vanitas still life as it is a religious work
as she contemplates her own life and death.
The Penitent Magdalene, 1684, Georges de la Tour |
And even today, this theme of spiritual retreat and isolation continues to
intrigue artists. The American artist Bill Viola in 1983 created a multimedia
work titled Room for St. John of the Cross (click below) in which he constructed a
brightly lit, uninhabited cabin in a darkened room. Inside, as seen through a
single window, he furnishes his symbolic monk's cell with a desk, a small
television, a pitcher of water, and a glass. Behind his solitary structure is
the back lit image of rugged remote mountains. An audio track plays the sound of
the rushing wind. The work depicts the spiritual isolation of St. John of the
Cross, a sixteenth century mystic and author of The Dark Night of the
Soul. This work employs all the latest technological media and materials yet
seeks to explore conceptually a spiritual/religious realm outside of biblical
lore in much the same manner as those of Savoldo, Bellini, la Tour, and
Veneziano. Viola's work depicts a movement beyond mere biblical illustration, or
even saintly examples, toward a spiritual enlightenment that, despite its
ancient roots, seeks to form a new core of modern religious art.
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