Showing posts with label virgin and child. Show all posts
Showing posts with label virgin and child. Show all posts

Sunday, 9 December 2012

Advent series: How to look at a religious painting. Part 2: Saints.

Simone Martini's St Geminianus, St Michael and St Augustine.


simone martini, polyptych wikimedia
Licensed via Wikimedia Commons.
Three saints hover in an indeterminate space, on a gold ground.  Two bishops with mitres and bishops' staffs flank a winged angel in the centre.  Three angels are poised above, fitted neatly into triangular frames; they gesture with elegant hands.

Two of the saints seem to be looking out of the picture but they are not really looking at us.  Their gaze is directed beyond us, into some transcendental distance.  Who knows what they see?  Eternity?  They are not of this world, after all.

St Geminianus
At left is this bishop:  He is Saint Geminianus.  He is the patron saint of the town of San Gimignano in the hills of Tuscany (that's his name in Italian:  Gimignano).  Look at the gorgeous detail of his punched halo (decorative patterns incised into the wood), the jewels on his mitre and his gloves, the clasps of his bible, and the curls of his beard.

martini, st geminianus
Licensed via Wikimedia Commons.

St Michael
Next comes the archangel Saint Michael.   There are four archangels:

•  Michael (who cast out Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden)

•  Gabriel (who is the angel of the annunciation and told Mary that she would give birth to God's son)

•  Raphael (who travelled with Tobit, Tobias's son)

•  and Uriel (who is not really well known at all).

Licensed via Wikimedia Commons.
Michael holds his attribute, the sword.  The Bible tells us, in the Book of Genesis, how God "placed cherubim at the East of the garden of Eden, and a flaming sword which turned every way".

Michael also holds scales for weighing the souls on Judgement Day.  You can see one tiny naked soul, praying.  Look also at the delicately raised fingers that grasp the scales.

St Augustine
Finally, there's Saint Augustine, the famous 4th C. / early 5th C. theologian and author of the Confessions and City of God.  (If you've read these, give them a go. I perused the Confessions a few years ago and found it a surprising page-turner.  Augustine was a young Roman lay-about who liked to party hard before he had a conversion experience and then wrote about his life with great frankness in the Confessions.)

Anyway, back to the picture!

martini, augustine
Licensed via Wikimedia Commons.
This is Augustine, not as the wild Roman lad but as a serious and devout Christian of mature years, kitted out in bishop's garb.

The original context
Simone Martini was commissioned to make this painting for the Church of Saint Augustine in San Gimignano.  The church is still there but the painting is there no longer.

Here is the church from the outside:

Church of St Augustine in San Gimignano, Tuscany
© Sailko.  Licensed via GNU Free Documentation License.



And here is the church from the inside (imagine Simone's painting on the altar):




The original altarpiece
The three saints are part of a polyptych (a many-winged altarpiece).  The polyptych originally had five panels.  Three of the panels are in the Fitzwilliam.  The central panel, a Virgin and Child, is now in Cologne, and another panel of Saint Catherine is in a private collection in Florence.

Here is a reconstruction of what the altarpiece looked like when it sat on an altar in Saint Augustine's church:

Source:  Cologne museums


It's not an overwhelmingly large painting.  Perhaps it was located in a side chapel?

Source: Cologne museums  

Simone Martini, Virgin and Child, Wallraf-Richartz-Museum, Cologne.
Licensed via Wikimedia Commons.


Simone Martini, St Catherine, private collection, Florence
Source: allart.biz
All together
Here's my own recreation of what the five panels looked like all together:




What, when, where
What:  St Geminianus, St Michael and St Augustine by Simone Martini.
When:  Painted around 1319.
Medium:  Tempera paint and gold leaf on wooden panel.
Dimensions:  Around 110 cm high.  Each wing is around 38 cm wide.
(Info taken from Fitz catalogue.)
Where:  Painted in Siena, Italy.  Now displayed in the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge.


Find out more by clicking on these sites:
• Fitzwilliam Museum site on Simone Martini  (includes detailed info and a lovely Petrarch quote)



If you enjoyed this you may also like to read these posts on religious art:

Part 1 of the advent series (Context):  Virgin and Child by Andrea di Vanni.

Icons and Hindu religious art:  Durga Puja



simone martini, polyptych wikimedia

Do let me know if you liked this painting in comments.  And if you've seen the other panels (in Cologne and in Florence), that would be very exciting to know!  Hope you're having a peaceful second advent Sunday.

Permalink:  http://artincambridge.blogspot.com/2012/12/advent-series-how-to-look-at-religious_9.html

Sunday, 2 December 2012

Advent series: How to look at a religious painting. Part 1: Context.

© Fitzwilliam Museum.  Source: Fitzwilliam Museum.

Do I have to be religious to like religious art?

It's the first Sunday of advent today, and this time of waiting for the Christian festival of Christmas made me think about Christian art.

People can tend to feel that they need to know something about art before they can enjoy it, especially if it's Old Master art and seems to be full of enigmatic symbols.  Or people feel a little odd about enjoying Christian art when they are not themselves practising Christians.

The fact is that art has been religious for most of its history.  It is only in the past 200 years or so that non-religious themes have come to dominate.  Sure, there were portraits and genre scenes of everyday life.  But religion was arguably at the heart of much of the art.


Advent series

Here are my own suggestions on how to look at a religious painting.  I have chosen four Italian Renaissance paintings, on display in Cambridge, and I will look at these over the course of the next four advent Sundays.  Each week I will focus on one particular aspect. 

My aim is not to give you lots of information but to invite you to look at these pictures with an open mind and without feeling that you need to know a lot before you can start to get something out of looking at them.  Of course, if you wish to go on and find out more for yourself -- all the better!


Today's painting

Today's painting is Andrea di Vanni's Virgin and Child, produced in Siena around 1400.  And today's focus is context.


Art in the gallery

This painting hangs in Gallery 6 of the Fitzwilliam Museum, among other Italian paintings.  It hangs on its own wall space, with a label giving the name of the artist, title and date.  The gallery is well-lit so that we can see the pictures in detail.  The walls are a neutral colour so that nothing distracts us.

©  Fitzwilliam Museum.  Source:  Fitzwilliam Museum.

Visitors wander through the gallery.  Sometimes they stop and look at a label or a picture.  More often than not, they spend more time looking at the label than they do at the picture.  People talk in quiet voices; nobody shouts, run or sings.  Lighting fires is not permitted nor is touching the pictures.

Art in church

Imagine how different this gallery setting is from the painting's original context!  14th-century altarpieces were placed in churches which were often dark.  An altarpiece vies with other sensory inputs for attention:

Candles played across the surfaces, causing the gold backgrounds to glitter. There was the smell of candle wax and incense.  There may also have been the sound of singing, of praying, of preaching, and of people responding in unison as part of the Catholic mass.  The visitor was confronted with other paintings, with stained-glass windows, with carved statues and pilasters, with mosaic floors and marbled walls.

Nun praying in St Peter's, Rome. ©  Holly Hayes.  Source:  Sacred Destinations
And of course, the visitor wasn't really a 'visitor' but a devotee.  People approached religious paintings not as art but as cult objects to be venerated.

Art in the home

Andrea di Vanni's painting is quite small (94.9 x 52.7 cm) so it was probably not used as an altarpiece.  It's more likely to have been used in a more intimate context, for example, in somebody's home or as part of a monk's cell.  But, just like larger altarpieces, this is an object that invites devotion.

palazzo davanzati
Palazzo Davanzati, Florence.
Source:  lifebeyondtourism

How Virgin and Child invites devotion

•  the faces
They are shown frontally and gazing evenly outwards; their gazes don't quite hit the viewers but look beyond, into some transcendental distance:  they are not of our world.

•  the splendid gold background
Gold was expensive and it is used here to show how precious the subject of the picture is:  the baby Jesus Christ and his mother.

•  the blue of the Virgin's gown.
This was made from lapis lazuli, the most expensive pigment during the Renaissance.

•  the glorious haloes
They are made using gold leaf and then incised with what is called a punch: a metal tool for scratching intricate patterns into the wooden panel.

© Fitzwilliam Museum.  Source: Fitzwilliam Museum. 

•  the architectural frame
This too is covered in gold and moulded gesso to give it relief; it removes the depicted figures from their banal everyday surroundings.

•  the symbolic bird held by the Christ child
This is a goldfinch which can refer to the Resurrection or to the Passion or be a protector against the plague.  

•  the importance of the Virgin
Increasingly, during the 14th and 15th centuries, Mary the mother of God became important, almost as important as Christ himself; she was seen as the primary saint who could intercede between God and humans.

How Renaissance people used religious images

Here is how the 14th-century Florentine Giovanni Morelli used a religious image, the picture of a Crucifixion, to deal with the death of his young son:

"I knelt with bare knees before the figure of the crucified son of God ... I was in my nightgown, with nothing on my head, and wore a halter around the neck.  Gazing upon Him, I began my prayer by first picturing and looking at my sins ... My hear and all my senses heightened to the greatest tenderness..."

Source:  British Library.

Morelli prayed while "gazing continually at the image" until he finally stood up and "took hold of the painting with devotion and kissed it..."
(Morelli is quoted in Evelyn Welch's Art in Renaissance Italy, Oxford University Press, 1997, p.309.)

This intriguing testimony gives a small insight into how 14th-century Italians used these religious images, with what passion, devotion and physical interaction.  How different from the modern gallery-goer!

More on the context of Italian altarpieces in this National Gallery video.

So do you have to be religious...?

I don't think you do.  And if you are religious, you will (probably) not be religious in a 14th-century way.  None of us today kisses and prays to pictures in the gallery (although some of us do leave devotional objects to sculptures...)  So go forth and be undaunted!

The picture comes to us from history (and we can imagine ourselves into the historical viewer and user).  But the picture is also right there in front of our eyes.  That's the beauty of art:  both then and now, both here and far, far away.

Oh, and I'd already finished this post when I came across this interesting article in The Guardian:  Do we need faith to see religious art?

Have a lovely advent Sunday, whatever your creed may be!

What and where
Andrea di Vanni (Sienese artist), Virgin and Child, c. 1400, egg tempera  and gold on a wooden panel, 94.9 x 52.7 cm.  Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, UK, Gallery 6.

© Fitzwilliam Museum.  Source: Fitzwilliam Museum.

If you enjoyed this post you may like Part 2 even better:

Advent series.  How to look at a religious painting:  Simone Martini's altarpiece with saints.


Permalink:  http://artincambridge.blogspot.com/2012/12/advent-series-how-to-look-at-religious.html


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