Sunday, April 20, 2025

Links for the Easter Season


Anthony van Dyck, The Resurrection
Flemish, c. 1631-1632
Hartford (CT), Wadsworth Athenaeum

Alleluia! 

Alleluia!

Alleluia!




The days of Lent and the days of sadness that are the Triduum are past and Easter 2025 has arrived!

Alleluia! 

Alleluia!

Alleluia!


I wish you a happy and profoundly inspiring Easter Season.


Alleluia! 

Alleluia!

Alleluia!



To guide some of your explorations of the themes of this joyful season I recommend to you the links below.  They lead to some of the commentary that I have written over the years regarding the iconography of the Easter Season, which extends from this happy day till Pentecost and Trinity Sunday.

Please feel free to explore the art created to imagine the Resurrection and the days immediately following, all the way through to the feast of the Holy Trinity.  I hope that considering these events and the pictures that artists have created to illustrate them over the centuries will help you to feel more connected to the long tradition of Christian art offered to the glory of God and to the living Church of our own time.

Links have constantly been improved over the years.  New images, better quality images and new material are constantly being incorporated.  If the original publication date suggests the material is now old, it isn't.  I am constantly revising and housekeeping.

Please note that over the course of the Easter Season I will be overhauling every one of the essays listed below to swap out old images with few pixels for newer ones with a greater number of pixels, giving you more visible details when you enlarge the images.  I will also be adding new images that turn up in the course of my hunt for improved ones (and this happens all the time).  Much more material turns up every year!  So, check back often to see what's new.

The Resurrection, the Incredulity of Thomas, Emmaus


Title

Link

The Women at the Tomb



Noli Me Tangere



Jesus, the Gardener


The Incredulity of St. Thomas (Doubting Thomas)


Emmaus -- The Journey



Emmaus -- The Recognition



Climbing from the Tomb



Hovering over the Tomb



Bursting from the Tomb



An Awkward
Resurrection Image


Apparitions 




Good Shepherd Sunday


The Lake of Galilee -- The Disciples Go Fishing



Commission to Peter -- The Good Shepherd Transfers Responsibility



The Commission to the Apostles



Christ Appears to His Mother


Christ Presents the Redeemed to His Mother







The Ascension




Striding into the Sky


Lifted in a Mondorla or on a Cloud



The Disappearing Feet



The Direct Approach





Pentecost


Tongues of Fire    










https://imaginemdei.blogspot.com/2016/05/tongues-of-fire.html

At This Sound, They Gathered In a Crowd


A Dove Descending  





The Holy  Trinity


Worthy Is The Lamb


Father, Son, Spirit



Iconography of the
Holy Trinity –
Imagining The Unimaginable


The Holy Trinity -- Love Made Visible


The Holy Trinity -- The Throne of Grace

  





 




























© M. Duffy, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025

Saturday, April 19, 2025

The Day of Gloom and the Coming of the Light

Paolo Veronese, The Dead Christ Supported By Angels
Italian, c. 1587-1589
Berlin, Gemäldegalerie der Staatliche Museen zu Berlin






On a typical Holy Saturday the church is quiet, the tabernacle empty, the altar stripped. People come for services such as Tenebrae, made up of readings, songs and symbolic acts such as the snuffing out of candles or for Confession to ask God for forgiveness.



 Basically, the prevailing mood is quiet, a little gloomy even, but with a hint of excitement nonetheless.


Underneath it all is a sense of expectation.  And, in the evening, as darkness descends, we gather (or perhaps watch on the net or on TV) to celebrate the Easter Vigil, the Great Vigil, in which the darkness of the tomb is turned to the light of resurrection.



As the massive newly carved and lit Paschal Candle is carried down the aisle of the darkened church we will be confronted with a symbolic image that has come down to us from remote centuries, for the light represents the Risen Christ.  As we light our individual candles from the One Candle the church gradually fills with light.  What was obscure and gloomy just moments ago can be seen clearly.  It is a magnificent symbol of the Resurrection, of the share we each have in it and of the effect that spreading that light can have on the world.  

Deacon Singing the Exultet 
From  an Exultet Roll
Italian (Montecassino), c. 1072
In this scene he gestures toward the Paschal Candle, which is being incensed

For more information on the images that relate to both the day of waiting and of the Paschal Candle, please click on the following:

The Harrowing of Hell here

The Dead Christ in the Tomb here

Easter Vigil and the Paschal Candle here

©  M. Duffy, 2015, updated 2020 and 2021 and 2022

Friday, April 18, 2025

O Sacred Head Surrounded

Fra Angelico, Head of Christ
Italian, c. 1430-1440
Livorno, Church of Santa Maria del Soccorso
On Deposit with Museo Civico Giovanni Fattori


"O Sacred Head surrounded By crown of piercing thorn!
O bleeding Head so wounded, Reviled and put to scorn!
Death’s pallid hue comes o’er Thee, The glow of life decays,
Yet angel hosts adore Thee, And tremble as they gaze.



I see Thy strength and vigor All fading in the strife,
And death with cruel rigor, Bereaving Thee of life:
O agony and dying! O love to sinners free!
Jesus, all grace supplying, O turn Thy face on me.



In this, Thy bitter passion, Good shepherd, think of me,
With Thy most sweet compassion, Unworthy though I be:
Beneath Thy cross abiding, Forever would I rest;
In Thy dear love confiding, And with Thy presence blest."



Passion Hymn attributed to Saint Bernard of Clairvaux (12th Century)
English translation by Henry W. Baker (1861)



For many years I have been struck by a variant of the Man of Sorrows theme that focuses just on the head of Jesus, wounded and wearing the crown of thorns.  It reminded me forcefully of the hymn "O Sacred Head Surrounded" that has been a favorite since I learned it as a child during my pre-Vatican II parochial school's mandatory rehearsal every Wednesday morning for the Children's Mass which we were all expected to attend on the coming Sunday.  And we sang!  While many of the hymns we learned in those groggy morning sessions have faded from use, this one has not.  It remains a staple of just about every Christian church's Lenten experience.


Holy Face
Italian or Spanish, 15th Century
Paris, Musée du Louvre

For many months I have collected images and background information on the various images of the Sacred Head and a fascinating image it is.  However, both in 2019 and 2020 my good intentions for an essay have gone out the window.  In 2019 we witnessed the disastrous fire at Notre-Dame de Paris and in 2020 the terrible ordeal of the COVID-19 pandemic, which stiffled my ability to think at the same time as it has confined me to my apartment.  The years since have been dominated by increasing pain and immobility, which have limited the amount of time I can spend on fact gathering.


Petrus Christus, Head of Christ
Flemish, c. 1445
New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art

It is, however, appropriate that I share at least some of the images with you this Holy Week.  For, one of the great treasures of Notre-Dame is the relic of the Crown of Thorns itself.  

Antonello da Messina, Head of Christ
Italian, c. 1470-1479
New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art


Doubtless many readers will scoff and say "The Crown of Thorns! 
Really!  Is she really serious about that?"  And, once upon a time I shared in that skepticism.  It seemed wildly fanciful to suppose that such a thing could possibly have been real.  However, on more mature consideration I think that it is not completely improbable that certain items associated with the death of Jesus were reverently preserved at the time and specially valued after the Resurrection.  In fact, it is actually very unlikely that they were simply discarded at the time.


Aelbert Bouts, Head of Christ
Flemish, c. 1500-1525
Antwerp, Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten


Is it so difficult to believe that someone picked up the crown of thorns when it was removed from his head and kept it?  We know from the Gospels that there were people there at the cross who loved him, starting with his mother.  Might someone have kept it for her?  It seems a very human thing to do.  


Sebald Beham, Head of Christ
German, 1520
London, British Museum


There was once a belief that the description of his being nailed to the cross was an invention, until evidence was found in  the skeleton of another crucified individual of the nails used to fix his feet to the cross on which he died.  Consequently, might not the nails drawn from Jesus' hands and feet have been preserved by his family?  



Ankle bones of man crucified in 70AD
Jerusalem, Israel Museum


The Crown of Thorns and the Nail kept in Notre-Dame were obtained by Saint Louis/Louis IX in Constantinople, which became the repository of many of the most treasured relics from Palestine and Syria as those areas were overrun by Muslim invaders in the seventh century.  Once they arrived in Paris, we know where they were and we also know that thorns from the Crown were removed and given to this church or that abbey all through the medieval period, so that what remains today is the twined branches, denuded of the thorns and encased in a glass and gilt reliquary.  Nevertheless, there is really no reason to doubt that the Crown we see today is the same one brought to France by Saint Louis and little reason to doubt that it once was pressed on the head of Jesus.  Certainly, the firefighters who fought to retrieve it from the burning church on April 15, 2019 did not.  

On Good Friday 2020 (April 10, 2020) the relic was displayed for an hour of veneration in the ruins of Notre-Dame.  Due to restrictions on public gatherings due to the pandemic, veneration had to be televised.  The event was recorded and may still be available on the KTO-TV YouTube channel.  

The Crown of Thorns in its reliquary
Paris, Cathedral of Notre-Dame de Paris


On December 13, 2024, a few days after the reopening of the cathedral, the Crown of Thorns was returned to the church in a solemn procession that ended in the blessing of a new, modern setting for it.  The Crown, in its glass reliquary, will now be seen suspended in the middle of a golden sunburst, which incorporates gilded cedar wood, crystal and ceramic.  In addition, its location has been moved from one of the side chapels to the central apsidal chapel.  This puts it in a place of honor at the easternmost point of the main axis, one of the main pivotal points of the cathedral.

The Crown of Thorns in its new location at Notre-Dame de Paris.

On January 10, 2025 public veneration according to a set schedule was recommenced.  


So, I present today a selection of the larger group of images of the Sacred Head Surrounded by Crown of Piercing Thorn.


Correggio (Antonio Allegri), Head of Christ
Italian, c. 1525-1530
Los Angeles, J. Paul Getty Museum


Guido Reni, Head of Christ
Italian, Early 1630s
Detroit, Institute of Arts

Wenceslaus Hollar, Ecce Homo
Czech, 1647
London, British Museum


Head of Christ
Italian, Early 18th Century
St. Petersburg, State Hermitage Museum

Ivory Head of Christ
French, 19th Century
Private Collection


The full essay I was planning will have to wait a bit.


© M. Duffy, 2019, updated 2020, 2021 and 2025.


Sunday, April 6, 2025

Meditating on the Passion

Fra Angelico and Assistants, The Mocking of Christ
Italian, c. 1440-1441
Florence, Convent of San Marco, Cell #7

Over the life of this blog I have written extensively about the iconography that surrounds the subject of the Passion of Christ.  

Here is a series of links to many of those articles.  They are organized around themes suggested by meditations, both theological and artistic, and by such devotions as the Rosary and the Stations of the Cross.  


As we approach the final week of Lent, I offer them for your perusal.



I updated many of these listings over the last few years.  Sometimes this has resulted in the addition of new material.  In most cases I have replaced the picture files with newly available photos in higher definition than was available when the essays were originally written.

There is a great deal of material here that you can use to explore the themes presented.  May you have a fruitful experience while using them.



2012 Series:  Meditations on the Passion
 
Meditation on the Passion
 
April 1, 2012
 

The Mocking of Christ by Fra Angelico

April 4, 2012


The Ecce Homo

April 5, 2012

 
The Man of Sorrows

April 6, 2012


In the Tomb

 
2018 Additions:
The Instruments of the Passion  

The Man of Sorrows with Instruments of the Passion


April 7, 2012



March 28, 2018


March 29, 2018




 


















 






 































2019 with 2020 update

O Sacred Head Surrounded                          April 19, 2019            https://imaginemdei.blogspot.com/2019/04/o-sacred-head.html


© M. Duffy, 2017, update 2020, 2022, 2023 and 2024.