Showing posts with label college. Show all posts
Showing posts with label college. Show all posts

Saturday, 19 April 2014

Happy Easter Saturday! or, The Harrowing of Hell

Have you ever wondered what Jesus Christ was doing in between his death on the cross (Good Friday) and his resurrection (Easter  Sunday)?

Well, he was down in hell.  Rescuing some of the worthy souls trapped down there and taking them straight to Heaven.  Eve, Abraham and Adam were all included.

This is called the Harrowing of Hell (or anastasis in Greek - I just love that word).


The Harrowing of Hell.  Manuscript illumination, from f.54r of MS K.21,
Canticles, Hymns and Passion of St Christ, late 13th/early 14th C.
Source:  Collection of St John's College Library, Cambridge


I'm not 100% sure of the iconography but it looks to me as if Christ is standing on the instruments of his torture (planks from the cross).  I don't know what the symbols on the planks stand for.  He's wrapped his red funeral shroud around himself, or that's what it looks like as he's not fully clothed.  And he's stabbing the Devil's mouth with a long spear-like thing which looks more like a shaft of light than anything physical.

Three souls (the middle one is surely Eve) come huddling out through the Gate of Hell.  I like the way Hell has turreted architecture.  And I love the way the naked humans are walking barefoot on the Devi's teeth.

Satan is angry red (but a different, more orangey red from the regal red of Christ's robe).  The eyes are big and bulging, as are those of a beak-nosed sub-demon baring his teeth at the divine intruder.  Two tiny comic-looking devils cavort in the background:  the blue horned one looks a bit like a cow, and the bat-winged one blowing his little trumpet seems to have jumped out of Maurice Sendak's Where the Wild Things Are.

Four more souls crowd together in Satan's maw.  One of them holds his face in his palm.  Their eyebrows and downturned mouths express desperate misery.  Are they among those about to be saved?  Or are their sins too great?

I like the ocular intimacy (a phrase I borrow from Mika Natif in her chapter in this brilliant book that I'm reading at the moment) between Christ and the foremost human (Adam?).  The anatomical detail is also great:  breast bones, clavicles, rib cages, diaphragms, calf muscles -- all carefully delineated.

Have a peaceful and happy Easter, everyone!


If you'd like to read more:
St John's College Library, mediaeval manuscripts

Icons and their interpretation: The Khora anastasis (great analysis of a brilliant Byzantine Harrowing fresco in the Kariye Cami in Istanbul)

Eat the bible (a sceptic's view)

Thursday, 29 August 2013

What's on in September 2013: Art in Cambridge





My top three tips for art in September:

1.  Open Cambridge
Fabulous opportunities to visit museums, colleges and other venues.

The highlights:

•  Architecture:  Sainsbury Laboratory, Bateman St (14 Sept)
Fantastic new architecture, not normally open to the public.  I blogged about it here and here.

 More architecture:  University of Cambridge Sports Centre, Charles Babbage Rd (13 Sept)
A tour led by the architects, Arup Associates.


 College:  Parker and Taylor Libraries, Corpus Christi College (13 Sept)
Take any opportunity you can find to sneak peeks into a college.  Normally, colleges close their doors to the general public or demand entrance fees.

 Stourbridge Fair at the Leper Chapel, Newmarket Rd
One of the oldest buildings in Cambridge (12th C., older than the university).  Not normally open but here's a chance to visit!  I'll be going primarily for the architecture but the re-enacted fair could be fun (Stourbridge Fair used to be the biggest fair in Europe -- I know, amazing).

When:  Fri-Sun 13-14 Sept 2013
Book here.  (It's free!)

Plus:  Bridge the Gap charity walk on Sun, 15 Sept.  Sign up, raise money, and see a whole ton of Cambridge colleges!





2.  Jesus College Sculpture exhibition

Last chance to visit Jesus College, its wonderful grounds (a former nunnery), its mediaeval chapel and its contemporary sculpture set among bushes and turrets.

Combine seeing the 'Sculpture in the Close' display (ends late Sept) and the permanent sculpture collection (not open to the public after Sept).



Ends:  22 Sept 2013
Where:  Jesus College, Jesus Lane




3.  Chloe Leaper at the Drawing Cube

People have been able to follow this project for a few weeks but it will be finished on 7 September.  I had a peek through the window:  mysterious scribbles all over the walls, controlled and geometric; also a delicate scaffolding of wood -- all very promising!





When:  7-15 Sept 2013
Where:  Drawing Cube, 9 Norfolk St (next to CB2)



Related posts:
What's on in August (a lot of this continues into September)




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