Jean Joubert, The Sacrifice of Noah French, c. 1721-1725 Paris, Musee du Louvre, Département des Arts graphiques |
“God said
to Noah and to his sons with him:
"See,
I am now establishing my covenant with you
and your
descendants after you
and with
every living creature that was with you:
all the
birds, and the various tame and wild animals
that were
with you and came out of the ark.
I will
establish my covenant with you,
that never
again shall all bodily creatures be destroyed
by the
waters of a flood;
there
shall not be another flood to devastate the earth."
God added:
"This
is the sign that I am giving for all ages to come,
of the
covenant between me and you
and every
living creature with you:
I set my
bow in the clouds to serve as a sign
of the
covenant between me and the earth.
When I
bring clouds over the earth,
and the
bow appears in the clouds,
I will
recall the covenant I have made
between me
and you and all living beings,
so that
the waters shall never again become a flood
to destroy
all mortal beings."
Genesis
9:8-15
(First
Reading for the First Sunday of Lent, Year B)
The New Beginnings of Lent
Lent is a
time for new beginnings. Each year
Christians are invited to think again, to reform their lives, to start anew in
their efforts to follow Christ. In the
liturgical readings also there are new beginnings. Each year the Gospel for the first Sunday of
Lent is drawn from the account of the temptations of Christ from each of the
Synoptic Gospels in turn. The temptations
of Christ mark the beginning of the public ministry of Jesus, the point at
which he leaves his hitherto quiet life in Nazareth and takes to the roads of
Galilee and Judea, gathering disciples and preaching the good news of the
Kingdom of God. In Year B the first, Old
Testament, reading is also the story of a new beginning.
The Story of Noah
It is the end
of the story of Noah and the great Flood.
In this story Noah receives God’s command to build a huge ship, an ark,
big enough for himself, his wife, his family and two of every animal
alive. God tells him that he is about to
destroy the sinful people of the earth with a great Flood, but that Noah and
his family and the animals they bring with them will survive to repopulate the
cleansed earth. Noah does as he is
commanded. He builds the ark, in spite
of the derision of his neighbors and, at a further command from God, he loads
the ship with one pair of all the animals on the earth, plus the food for all
of them. Then he and his family board as
well and the rains come and come and come and come. The earth floods and remains flooded for
months. All living things not on board
the ark die in the waters. It takes further
months for the water to begin to evaporate.
Eventually Noah
sends out birds, ravens and a dove, to see if there is any dry land. The birds are unsuccessful at first, but
eventually they bring him evidence that the land has dried sufficiently for
plants to begin to grow again. The ark
finally comes to rest on a mountain and the people and the animals leave and
begin to spread out over the earth again.
At this point Noah prepares a sacrifice to thank God for saving them and
it is then that God speaks once again.
He announces that he will make an agreement, a covenant, with Noah and
his family to never again drown all living things. The covenant includes not only the humans but
all the other living things that were aboard the ark. And the sign of the covenant will be the
rainbow that appears in the sky after rain.
It will be a reminder that God will never again so completely devastate
the earth with water.
The Rainbow
Rainbows have
always seemed a trifle magical. Even
now, when we understand the physical mechanism that makes them, the breakdown
of light into the color spectrum that occurs as the light passes through
raindrops, there is still something ethereal and otherworldly about them. Imagine how it must have seemed to people who
did not realize how the shining, translucent arch of colors was created! No wonder that the biblical authors imagined this
thing of beauty was a sign of God’s benevolence, for the rainbow usually means
that the rain is over of at least that it is ending.
For artists, picturing
a rainbow may be a bit daunting. Real rainbows
are subtle and ephemeral. Such an effect
isn’t easy to reproduce, especially so before the development of oil paint in the later middle ages, so they mostly were content to depict a rainbow as
solid, multicolored bands forming an arch shape.
Early Depictions: Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages
While depictions of Noah and the ark date from the earliest works of Christian art following the Edict of Milan in 315, these images focus primarily on the central act of the story, the building, stocking and survival of the ark during the Flood. Images of the aftermath do not appear for some time. The earliest one I was able to find dates from the sixth century copy of the Book of Genesis, known as the Vienna Genesis.
Early depictions of
the rainbow sign of the covenant between God and Man generally interpret the story
simply, as an image that focuses on the confrontation between God, whether
shown in full figure or as just a symbolic hand extended from the heavens, and
Noah. It appears in virtually every
medium available.
The Rainbow of the Covenant
From the Vienna Genesis
Greek, 6th century
Vienna, Österreichische Nationalbibliothek
MS Codex Vindobonensis theol. grec. 31
God Tells Noah to Leave the Ark and Makes a Covenant with Him
Italian, 11th-12th Century
Salerno, Museo Diocesano San Matteo
Mosaic Artist, God Makes a Covenant with Noah
Byzantine, c. 1150-1171
Palermo, Palazzo dei Normanni, Cappella Palatina
The Sacrifice of Noah Italian, c. 1147-1189 Monreale, Church of Santa Maria la Nuova You may have to enlarge this to see the tiny figure of God peering down from a cloud to talk to Noah. |
Mosaic Artist, The Sacrifice of Noah
Byzantine, c. 1180-1189
Monreale, Church of Santa Maria Nuova
The Sign of God's Promise French, 12th-13th Century Chartres, Cathedral of Notre Dame |
God's Covenant with Noah German, c. 1335 Wienhausen, Evangelical Convent and Former Cistercian Cloister of Saint Mary |
Paolo Uccello, The Sacrifice of Noah and God's Covenant with Noah
From Scenes from the life of Noah
Italian, c. 1447-1448
Florence, Church of Santa Maria Novella, Green Cloister
The Renaissance, Mannerism and the Proto-Baroque
The same holds
true for works produced in the periods known as the Renaissance and Mannerist periods. During these periods woodcuts and engravings came to replace painted illuminations as the
illustrations in books. And both mural
and panel painting spread far and wide.
Mongrammist FA, God Shows Noah and His Family the Rainbow
German, Early 16th Century
Dresden, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen, Kupferstich-Kabinett
Monogrammist MS, Scenes from the story of Noah after the Flood
From a Luther Bible
German, 1534
London, Trustees of the British Museum
Hans Bol for Gerard de Jode, After the Flood_
Flemish, c. 15510-1600
Wolfenbüttel, Herzog August Bibliothek
Philips Galle After Maarten van Heemskerck, The Sacrifice of Noah
From The Disasters of the Jewish People
Flemish, 1569
Philadelphia, Museum of Art
Willem de Pannemaker after Michiel Coxie the Elder, God Blesses Noah's Family Flemish, After 1567 Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum |
Paintings
The Bassano Workshop
Workshop of Bassano family, The Sacrifice of Noah After the Deluge Italian, Second Half of the 16th Century Madrid, Museo Nacional del Prado |
Leandro Bassano, The Sacrifice of Noah After the Deluge Italian, c. 1575-1600 Madrid, Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando |
Baldassare Croce, God's Covenant with Noah Italian, c. 1587-1588 Rome, San Giovanni in Laterano Complex, Scala Santa, Left Stairway |
One thing
that really surprised me while I was working on assembling the pictures for
this essay was that, over the course of the sixteenth century, the figure of God disappears from many works of art. He is either missing entirely or has been
replaced by the tetragrammaton, the Hebrew name for God, written in Hebrew
letters.
Pieter van der Borcht, The Sacrifice of Noah and the Covenant with God From Imagines et Figurae Bibliorum Flemish, 1581 London, Trustees of the British Museum |
Attributed to Symon Novelanus, The Sacrifice of Noah
From Figurae et imagines bibliorum
Dutch, c. 1600
Amserdam, Rijksmuseum
Crispijn de Passe the Elder, God Enters into a Covenant with Noah
From a Genesis
Dutch, 1612
New York, Met, Drawings and Prints
The Baroque Period
This continues during the Baroque period, when one is as likely to find the image of God as the find the tetragrammaton or absolutely nothing as the source of the rainbow. In general, the tendency is toward a less miraculous rendering for the source of the rainbow, indeed, often resulting in the depiction of only the rainbow itself.
Nicolas Poussin, The Sacrifice of Noah French, First Half of the17th Century Knutsford, Cheshire (UK), National Trust, Tatton Park |
Pietro da Cortona, God's Covenant with Noah Italian, c. 1645 Florence, Palazzo Pitti |
Lodovico Gimignani, The Alliance Between God and Noah Allegory on the House of Pamphili Italian, c. Second Half of 17th Century London, The Courtauld Gallery |
Pietro Santo Bartoli After Raphael, God Shows the Rainbow to Noah Italian, c. 1650-1677 Vienna, The Albertina |
Juan Antonio de Frias y Escalante, Noah and His Family After the Flood Spanish, 1668 Madrid, Museo Nacional del Prado |
The Eighteeenth- and Nineteenth Centuries
This non-miraculous interpretation of the rainbow event is especially true from the beginning of the eighteenth century to the present, with a few
notable exceptions.
Elias van Nijmegen, The Sacrifice of Noah
Dutch, c. First Half of 18th Century
Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum
Circle of Carlo Antonio Carlone, The Sacrifice of Noah
Italian, c. 1701-1715
Lambach (AU), Benedictine Monastery of Saint Florian, Ambulatory
The Sacrifice of Noah
German, c. 1700-1750
Schwäbisch Hall, City Hall
Caspar Luyken, The Sacrifice of Noah
Dutch, 1712
Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum
Francesco Fernandi, The Sacrifice of Noah_
Italian, c. 1720
Stourhead, Wiltshire (UK), National Trust Collections
Jacopo Amigoni, The Sacrifice of Noah
Italian, 1728
Ottobeuren, Ottobeuren Benedictine Monastery Chapel
Saverio Grue, The Sacrifice of Noah
Painted ceramic plaque
Italian (Caserta), c. 1755
London, Trustees of the British Museum
Philippe-Jacques de Loutherbourg, The Sacrifice of Noah
From the Macklin Bible, Vol. 1-4
French, 1794
Nashville, Vanderbilt University, Jean and Alexander Heard Library
Joseph Anton Koch, The Sacrifice of Noah
German, 1803
Frankfurt (Main), Städel Museum
Joseph Anton Koch, The Sacrifice of Noah
German, 1814
Berlin, Nationalgalerie der Staatlichen Museen zu Berlin
John Martin, The Covenant
From Illustrations to the Bible
English, 1832
London, Tate Gallery
Daniel Maclise, Noah's Sacrifice
Irish, c. 1847-1853
Leeds, Leeds Art Gallery
Wilhelm Obermann after Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld, Noah's Sacrifice
From Die Bible in Bildern, Plate 19
German, 1852- 1860
Hamburg, Hamburger Kunsthalle
Ludwig Gloetzle, Sacrifice of Noah
German, c. 1888-1891
Salzburg, Cathedral of Saints Rupert and Virgil
Jean Bataille, The Sacrifice of Noah Flemish, c. 1841 Ghent, Museum voor Schone Kunsten |
Steinheil, The Sacrifice of Noah
French, Middle of the 19th Century
Paris, Sainte Chapelle
Frederick James Shields, Stained Glass Design
English, c. 1900-1910
Wolverhampton, Wolverhampton Art Gallery
The Twentieth and the Twenty-First Centuries*
A Notable Exception
I mentioned that there was a notable exception to the trend of removing the image of God from the depictions of the appearance of the rainbow. Here it is. It was created in 1923 by the German artist Lovis Corinth and is quite different in tone from its predecessors. Instead of God appearing in the sky, he stands side by side wth Noah, pointing to the bow he has set in the heavens as a reminder of his pact with humans and all other creatures.
Lovis Corinth, The Rainbow German, 1923 Chicago, Art Institute |
However, this seems to be a solitary exception. The figure of God has basically been removed from the visual language of this important biblical story.
Kundry Niederhausen, Noah's Ark Window Swiss, 2014 Raperswilen, Evangelical Church |
And so it is today. The story of Noah is there, but only the mark of the covenant appears, not the maker.
Maybe it’s
time for a new beginning.
© M. Duffy,
2024
Excerpts
from the Lectionary for Mass for Use in the Dioceses of the United States
of America, second typical edition © 2001, 1998, 1997, 1986,
1970 Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, Inc., Washington, DC. Used with
permission. All rights reserved. No portion of this text may be reproduced by
any means without permission in writing from the copyright owner.
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