Crucifixions and crucifixes have appeared in the arts and popular culture from before the era of the pagan Roman Empire. The crucifixion of Jesus has been depicted in a wide range of religious art since the 4th century CE, frequently including the appearance of mournful onlookers such as the Virgin Mary, Pontius Pilate, and angels, as well as antisemitic depictions portraying Jews as responsible for Christ's death. In more modern times, crucifixion has appeared in film and television as well as in fine art, and depictions of other historical crucifixions have appeared as well as the crucifixion of Christ. Modern art and culture have also seen the rise of images of crucifixion being used to make statements unconnected with Christian iconography, or even just used for shock value.
Art
editLate Antiquity
editThe earliest known artistic representations of crucifixion predate the Christian era, including Greek representations of mythical crucifixions inspired by the use of the punishment by the Persians.[1]
The Alexamenos graffito, currently in the museum in the Palatine Hill, Rome, is a Roman graffito from the 2nd century CE which depicts a man worshiping a crucified donkey. This graffito, though apparently meant as an insult,[2] is the earliest known pictorial representation of the crucifixion of Jesus.[2][3][4][5][6] The text scrawled around the image reads in Greek Αλεξαμενος ϲεβετε θεον, which approximately translates to "Alexamenos worships God".[7][8][9][10]
In the first three centuries of Early Christian art, the crucifixion was rarely depicted. Some engraved gems thought to be 2nd or 3rd century have survived, but the subject does not appear in the art of the Catacombs of Rome, and it is thought that at this period the image was restricted to heretical groups of Christians. The earliest Western images clearly originating in the mainstream of the church are 5th-century, including the scene on the doors of Santa Sabina, Rome.[11] Constantine I forbade crucifixion as a method of execution, and early church leaders regarded crucifixion with horror, and thus, as an unfit subject for artistic portrayal.[12]
The purported discovery of the True Cross by Constantine's mother, Helena, and the development of Golgotha as a site for pilgrimage, together with the dispersal of fragments of the relic across the Christian world, led to a change of attitude. It was probably in Syria Palaestina that the image developed, and many of the earliest depictions are on the Monza ampullae, small metal flasks for holy oil, that were pilgrim's souvenirs from the Holy Land, as well as 5th-century ivory reliefs from Italy.[13] Prior to the Middle Ages, early Christians preferred to focus on the "triumphant" Christ, rather than a dying one, because the concept of the risen Christ was so central to their faith.[14] The plain cross became depicted, often as a "glorified" symbol, as the crux gemmata, covered with jewels, as many real early medieval processional crosses in goldsmith work were.
Eastern church
editEarly depictions showed a living Christ, and tended to minimize the appearance of suffering, so as to draw attention to the positive message of resurrection and faith, rather than to the physical realities of execution.[12][15] In the early history of the church in Ireland, important events were often commemorated by erecting pillars with elaborate crucifixes carved into them, such as where Saint Patrick, returning as a missionary bishop, saw the place he was held captive in his youth.[16]
Early Byzantine depictions such as that in the Rabbula Gospels often show Christ flanked by Longinus and Stephaton with their spear and pole with vinegar. According to the gospels, the vinegar was offered just before Christ died, and the lance used just after, so the presence of the two flanking figures symbolizes the "double reality of God and man in Christ".[17] In images from after the end of the Byzantine Iconoclasm, Christ is shown as dead, but his "body is undamaged and there is no expression of pain"; the Eastern church held that Christ's body was invulnerable. The S-shaped slumped body type was developed in the 11th century. These images were one of the complaints against Constantinople given by Rome in the Great Schism of 1054, although the Gero Cross in Cologne is probably nearly a century older.[18]
Greek painters from Constantinople heavily influenced Italian Byzantine art. Nikolaos Philanthropinos, Theophanes of Constantinople, and Apollonios were active in the Venetian Empire and taught painting. Philanthropinos painted St Mark's Basilica after the fire in the 1430s.[19][20][21][22]
Crete became the epicenter of Greek painting during the Renaissance and Baroque eras the style became known as the Cretan school of painting. Countless painters depicted the Crucifixion. Their work was heavily influenced by Venetian painting but followed the Greek mannerism prevalent at the time known as the Maniera Greca. Andreas Pavias uniquely depicted the Crucifixion following a gothic style and the painter depicted the impenitent thief turned around with his back facing the viewers to denote the difference between the two historical biblical figures.[23][24]
Other Cretan painters followed his style Theophanes the Cretan depicted the reversed figure in his Crucifixion fresco at Stavronikita Monastery on Mount Athos, Greece. Emmanuel Lambardos also continued the style in his Crucifixion.[25]
By the mid-1600s, Konstantinos Paleokapas completed his work entitled The Crucifixion following the traditional Maniera Greca. A mixture of Venetian painting and the traditional Greek Byzantine Style influenced the paintings but new colors were added painters chose to use gold-gilded backgrounds while also modernizing the dimensionality of the figures. Around 1647, Georgios Margkazinis finished his version of The Crucifixion (Margkazinis) which was an oil painting on limestone for San Giorgio dei Greci. The painter chose to emulate the Passion of Jesus a work by Jan Sadeler I a Flemish engraver.[26] Greek painters in the Venetian world began to follow the new style. Another notable painting that falls between the late Cretan school and Heptanese school is The Crucifixion (Moskos) by Ioannis Moskos painted in 1711.[27]
Western church
editThe earliest Western images of a dead Christ may be in the Utrecht Psalter, probably before 835.[28] Other early Western examples include the Gero Cross and the reverse of the Cross of Lothair, both from the end of the 10th century. The first of these is the earliest near life-size sculpted cross to survive, and in its large scale represents "suffering in its extreme physical consequences", a trend that was to continue in the West.[29] Such figures, especially as roods, large painted or sculpted crucifixes hung high in front of the chancel of churches, became very important in Western art, providing a sharp contrast with Eastern Orthodox traditions, where the subject was never depicted in monumental sculpture, and increasingly rarely even in small Byzantine ivories. By contrast, an altar cross, almost always a crucifix, became compulsory in Western churches in the Middle Ages. That it should be a crucifix was first specified in the Roman Missal of 1570 and small wall-mounted crucifixes were increasingly popular in Catholic homes from the Counter-Reformation, if not before. The image of a crucifix that bled when mocked and struck by Jews also gained popularity during this time.[30]
As a broad generalization, the earliest depictions, before about 900, tended to show all three crosses (those of Jesus, the Good Thief and the Bad Thief), but later medieval depictions mostly showed just Jesus and his cross. From the Renaissance either type might be shown. The number of other figures shown depended on the size and medium of the work, but there was a similar trend for early depictions to show a number of figures, giving way in the High Middle Ages to just the Virgin Mary and Saint John the Evangelist, shown standing on either side of the cross, as in the Stabat Mater depictions, or sculpted or painted on panels at the end of each arm of a rood cross.
The soldiers were less likely to be shown, but others of the party with Mary and John might be. Angels were often shown in the sky, and the Hand of God in some early depictions gave way to a small figure of God the Father in the heavens in some later ones, those these were always in the minority. Other elements that might be included were the sun and moon (evoking the darkening of the heavens at the moment of Christ's death), and Ecclesia and Synagoga. There were also representations of the alleged aggressors, including depictions of Jews mocking, glaring, slapping, and ultimately crucifying Jesus.[31] Although according to the Gospel accounts his clothing was removed from Jesus before his crucifixion, most artists have thought it proper to represent his lower body as draped in some way. In one type of sculpted crucifix, of which the Volto Santo in Lucca is the classic example, Christ continued to wear the long collobium robe of the Rabbula Gospels. The motif of the Pelican in her Piety – a mother pelican plucking flesh from her breast to feed her chicks – appears at the top of the cross in many medieval crucifixion scenes. The mother pelican signifies Jesus, sacrificing his flesh for man's (the chicks') salvation.[32]
In the Gothic period more elaborate narrative depictions developed, including many extra figures of Mary Magdalene, disciples, especially The Three Marys behind the Virgin Mary, soldiers often including an officer on a horse, and angels in the sky. The moment when Longinus the centurion pierces Christ with his spear (the "Holy Lance") is often shown, and the blood and water spurting from Christ's side is often caught in a chalice held by an angel. In larger images the other two crosses might return, but most often not. In some works donor portraits were included in the scene.[33] Such depictions begin in the late 12th century, and become common where space allows in the 13th century.[34]
Related scenes such as the Deposition of Christ, Entombment of Christ and Nailing of Christ to the Cross developed. In the Late Middle Ages, increasingly intense and realistic representations of suffering were shown,[35] paired with increasingly grotesque and malicious depictions of Pontius Pilate and the allegedly murderous Jews, reflecting the development of highly emotional andachtsbilder subjects and devotional trends such as German mysticism; some, like the Throne of Mercy, Man of Sorrows and Pietà, related to the Crucifixion. The same trend affected the depiction of other figures, notably in the "Swoon of the Virgin", who is very commonly shown fainting in paintings of between 1300 and 1500, though this depiction was attacked by theologians in the 16th century, and became unusual. After typically more tranquil depictions during the Italian Renaissance—though not its Northern equivalent, which produced works such as the Isenheim Altarpiece—there was a return to intense emotionalism in the Baroque, in works such as Peter Paul Rubens's Elevation of the Cross.
The scene always formed part of a cycle of images of the Life of Christ after about 600 (though it is noticeably absent before) and usually in one of the Life of the Virgin; the presence of Saint John made it a common subject for altarpieces in churches dedicated to him. From the late Middle Ages various new contexts for images were devised, from such large scale monuments as the "calvaire" of Brittany and the Sacri Monti of Piedmont and Lombardy to the thousands of small wayside shrines found in many parts of Catholic Europe, and the Stations of the Cross in the majority of Catholic churches.
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Russian Orthodox depiction of crucifixion by a painter of the Novgorod school, 1360
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14th-century wood crucifix, Milan
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Christ on the Cross by Fra Carnevale, circa 1445–1467
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Crucifix on the pulpit of Strasbourg Cathedral, 1485
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Cristo de La Laguna, Flemish-Brabanzon origin, 1510–14. Real Santuario del Cristo de La Laguna, San Cristóbal de La Laguna
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The tympanum of the Thesis Door at the Castle Church in Wittenberg depicts Martin Luther and Philip Melanchthon kneeling in prayer, facing the crucified Christ.
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Crucifixion by Albrecht Altdorfer, circa 1514–1516, with tiny donor couple among the feet of the main figures
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Cristo crucificado by Diego Velázquez, 1632, showing a Baroque return to realism and emotion in the depiction
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Seventeenth-century copper alloy crucifix, Democratic Republic of the Congo
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18th-century Russian Orthodox brass crucifix
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Crucified by José Luján Pérez, 1793, Cathedral of Santa Ana, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
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Crucifixion, seen from the Cross by the French painter James Tissot, 1886–1894, shows the view from the perspective of the crucified, and is regarded as an early example of the transition to modern art.[36]
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Mural of the Crucifixion in the Rosary Basilica (Berlin), 1906
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Crucifix at the Church of St Mary of the Angels, Singapore, 2004
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Crucifix at the Main Cathedral of the Russian Armed Forces, late 2010s
Modern art
editCrucifixion has appeared repeatedly as a theme in many forms of modern art.
The surrealist Salvador Dalí painted Crucifixion (Corpus Hypercubus), representing the cross as a hypercube. Fiona Macdonald describes the 1954 painting as showing a classical pose of Christ superimposed on a mathematical representation of the fourth dimension that is both unseeable and spiritual;[37] Gary Bolyer assesses it as "one of the most beautiful works of the modern era."[38] The sculpture Construction (Crucifixion): Homage to Mondrian, by Barbara Hepworth, stands on the grounds of Winchester Cathedral. Porfirio DiDonna's abstract Crucifixion is one of a number of religious works he painted in the 1960s, "blending the artist's devotion to the liturgy and his commitment to painting".[39] The "Welsh Window", given to the 16th Street Baptist Church after it was bombed by four Ku Klux Klansmen in 1963, is a work of support and solidarity. The stained glass window depicts a black man, arms outstretched, reminiscent of the crucifixion of Jesus; it was sculpted by John Petts, who also initiated a campaign in Wales to raise money to help rebuild the church.[40]
Photographer Robert Mapplethorpe's 1975 self-portrait shows the artist, nude and smiling, posed as if crucified.[41][42] The 1983 painting Crucifixion, by Nabil Kanso, employs a perspective that places the viewer behind Christ's cross. In 1987 photographer Andres Serrano created Piss Christ, a controversial photograph that shows a small plastic crucifix submerged in a glass of the artist's urine, in which Serrano intended to depict sympathetically the abuse of Jesus by his executioners.[43] In the 1990s, Marcus Reichert painted a series of crucifixions, though he did not identify the figure as Christ, but as a representation of human suffering.[44]
Other artists have used crucifixion imagery as a form of protest. In 1974, Chris Burden had himself crucified to a Volkswagen in Trans-Fixed. Robert Cenedella painted a crucified Santa Claus as a protest against Christmas commercialization,[45] displayed in the window of New York's Art Students League in December 1997. In August 2000, performance artist Sebastian Horsley had himself crucified without the use of any analgesics.[46]
-
Crucifixion by Porfirio DiDonna, 1964, oil on linen, 24 x 20 inches
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Construction (Crucifixion): Homage to Mondrian, 1966, by Barbara Hepworth
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Chris Burden's 1974 performance piece Trans-Fixed, in which he is crucified on a Volkswagen
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Marcus Reichert, Crucifixion VII (1991), oil and charcoal on linen with newsprint collage, 74" x 62"
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Gabriel von Max's 1866 painting Martyress depicts a crucified young woman and a young man laying flowers at her feet – a scene not corresponding to any of the female martyrs attested in formal Christian hagiography
Popular art
editCrucifixion in popular art, as with modern art, is sometimes used for its shock value. For example, a World War I Liberty bond poster by Fernando Amorsolo depicts a German soldier nailing an American soldier, his arms outspread, to the trunk of a tree. Crucifixion imagery is also used to make points in political cartoons. An image of a skinhead being crucified is a popular symbol among the skinhead subculture, and it is used to convey a sense of societal alienation or persecution against the subculture.[47]
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Liberty Bond poster by Fernando Amorsolo
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Postcard protesting German occupation of Poland. Sergey Solomko, circa 1915–17
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A crucified skinhead, an identifying symbol of the skinhead subculture
Graphic novels
editCrucifixion figures prominently in graphic novels from many cultures throughout the world.[48] In Western comic books, characters in cruciform are seen more often than actual crucifixions.[49] For example, Animal Man's fifth issue earned an Eisner Award nomination in 1989[50] for its "The Coyote Gospel", the story of Crafty, a thinly-disguised Wile E. Coyote (of the Road Runner cartoons)[51] and the depiction at the culmination of the issue of his dead body in cruciform. Superman, often seen as a Christ figure,[52] has also been crucified, as well as being shown in cruciform.[53][54]
Crucifixions and crucifixes have appeared repeatedly in Japanese manga and anime.[56] In manga iconography, crucifixes serve two purposes: as death symbols, and as symbols of justice.[57] Scholars such as Michael Broderick and Susan J. Napier argue that Japanese readers associate crucifixion imagery with apocalyptic themes, and trace this symbolism to Japanese secular views of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, rather than to religious faith.[58] Producers of anime generally deny any religious motivation for depiction of crucifixion.[59][60] Concern that Westerners may find these portrayals of crucifixion offensive has led some distributors and localization studios to remove crucifixion imagery from manga such as Fullmetal Alchemist[55][61] and anime such as Sailor Moon.[62][63]
Passion plays
editPassion plays are dramatic presentations of the trial and crucifixion of Jesus. They originated as expressions of devotion in the Middle Ages. In modern times, critics have said that some performances are antisemitic, portraying Jews as Jesus's murderous and hateful antagonist.[64]
Film and television
editFilm
editNumerous movies have been produced which depict the crucifixion of Jesus. Some of these movies depict the crucifixion in its traditional sectarian form, while others intend to show a more historically accurate account. For example, Ben-Hur (1959), was probably the first movie to depict the nails being driven through Jesus' wrists, rather than his palms. Mel Gibson's controversial The Passion of the Christ (2004) depicted an extreme level of violence, but showed the nails being driven into Jesus' palms, as is traditional, with ropes supporting the wrists.
Although crucifixion imagery is common, few films depict actual crucifixion outside of a Christian context. Spartacus (1960) depicts the mass crucifixions of rebellious slaves along the Appian Way after the Third Servile War. The character Big Bob is crucified by cannibals in Wes Craven's horror exploitation film The Hills Have Eyes (1977) as well as its 2006 remake. Conan the Barbarian (1982) depicts the protagonist being crucified on the Tree of Woe.
The 1979 British comedy film Monty Python's Life of Brian ends with a comical sequence in which several of the cast, including Brian, are crucified by the Romans. The film ends with them all singing the song "Always Look on the Bright Side of Life". In this sequence, the characters are not nailed to the crosses, but tied at the wrists to the crossbar, and are standing on smaller crosspieces at foot level.
In the 2010 film Legion, one of the diner patrons is found crucified upside down and covered with huge boils.
Television
editSimulated crucifixions have been performed in professional wrestling. On the December 7, 1998, edition of WWF Monday Night Raw, professional wrestling character The Undertaker crucified Steve Austin.[65] On October 26, 1996, in Extreme Championship Wrestling, Raven, during a feud with The Sandman, instructed his Raven's Nest to crucify Sandman.[66]
Other television performers have used crucifixion to make a point. The Australian comedian John Safran had himself crucified in the Philippines as part of a Good Friday crucifixion ritual for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation show, John Safran's Race Relations (2009).[67] Singer Robbie Williams performed a stunt on an April 2006 Easter Sunday show shown on the UK television channel Channel 4, in which he was affixed to a cross and pierced with needles.[68]
The HBO television series Rome (2005–2007) contained several depictions of crucifixion, as it was a common torture method during the historical period the show takes place in.
In the 2010 Starz television series Spartacus: Blood and Sand, Segovax, a slave recruit to the gladiatorial ludus of Lentulus Batiatus, attempts to assassinate Spartacus in the ludus washrooms and is crucified for doing so "after being parted from his cock".
Crucifixion has been depicted in the television series Xena: Warrior Princess (1995–2001), where its depiction has been cited in feminist studies as illustrating violent and misogynist tendencies within a messianic paradigm.[69]
In the History Channel series "Vikings", the character Æthelstan, after being captured by the Saxons and named an apostate, is shown wearing a crown of thorns and being nailed to a cross. After the cross is raised he is taken down at the order of King Ecbert.[citation needed]
The Japanese science fiction series Neon Genesis Evangelion features crucifixion as a recurring motif.
During the Pilot episode of Smallville, Clark Kent was tied up (only his underwear and a red S painted on his chest) on a scarecrow pole, resembling very much like a cross, and subdued with a Kryptonite necklace.
Video games
editIn Danganronpa Another Episode: Ultra Despair Girls, one of the women gets ultimately crucified on a cross with screws as Monokuma plays with the marionette strings.
In Fallout: New Vegas, a faction loosely inspired by ancient Rome known as Caesar's Legion regularly crucifies both its own citizens in Arizona and prisoners of their military campaign in the Mojave Wasteland. The player can interact with a handful of near-dead crucifixion victims, although attempting to free them is not possible due to their severe injuries.
Music
editClassical music
editFamous depictions of crucifixion in classical music include the St John Passion and St Matthew Passion by Johann Sebastian Bach, and Giovanni Battista Pergolesi's setting of Stabat Mater. Notable recent settings include the St. Luke Passion (1965) by Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki and the St. John Passion (1982) by Estonian composer Arvo Pärt. The 2000 work, La Pasión según San Marcos (St. Mark Passion) by Argentinian Jewish composer Osvaldo Golijov, was named one of the top classical compositions of the decade[70] for its fusion of traditional passion motifs with Afro-Cuban, tango, Capoeira, and Kaddish themes.[71]
Crucifixion has figured prominently in Easter cantatas, oratorios, and requiems. The third section of a full mass, the Credo, contains the following passage at its climax: "Crucifixus etiam pro nobis sub Pontio Pilato, passus et sepultus est," which means "And was crucified also for us under Pontius Pilate; he suffered and was buried." This passage was sometimes set to music separately as a Crucifixus, the most famous example being that of Antonio Lotti for eight voices.
The seven utterances of Jesus while on the Cross, gathered from the four gospels, have inspired many musical compositions, from Heinrich Schütz in 1645 to Ruth Zechlin in 1996, with the best known being Joseph Haydn's ''composition, written in 1787.
Depictions of crucifixion outside the Christian context are rare. One of the few examples is in Ernest Reyer's opera Salammbô (1890).
Popular music
editThe 1970 rock opera Jesus Christ Superstar by Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber ends with Jesus' crucifixion.
The cover art of Tupac Shakur's album The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory features an image of Tupac being crucified on a cross. He stated that the image was not a mockery of Christ; rather, it showed how he was being "crucified" by the media.[citation needed] Multiple Marilyn Manson videos such as "I Don't Like The Drugs But The Drugs Like Me" and "Coma White" feature crucifixion imagery, often oddly staged in surreal modern or near modern-day settings. The Norwegian black metal band Gorgoroth had several people on stage affixed to crosses to give the appearance of crucifixion at a now infamous concert in Kraków,[72] and repeated this act in the music video for "Carving a Giant." In 2006, singer Madonna opened a provocative concert held near Vatican City with an onstage crucifixion, complete with a crown of thorns, which was also labeled as a move to bring attention to the issue of African children dying of AIDS.[73][74]
Novels
editSue Monk Kidd's 2020 novel The Book of Longings, tells the fictional story of Ana, an educated woman who marries Jesus. D. G. Martin says the novel "reconstructs the crucifixion experience in a way more horrible and poignant than any of the four Gospels."[75]
Sports
editThe Christ Air trick invented by skateboarder and later evangelical pastor Christian Hosoi was so named due to its intended resemblance to Jesus Christ's cruciform pose on the cross.[76][77]
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ Hengel, Martin (1977). Crucifixion in the ancient world and the folly of the message of the cross. Philadelphia: Fortress Press. pp. 13 and 22. ISBN 978-0-8006-1268-9. Retrieved May 22, 2010.
- ^ a b Viladesau, Richard (1992). The Word in and Out of Season. Paulist Press. p. 46. ISBN 978-0-8091-3626-1.
- ^ Walter Lowrie, Monuments of the Early Church, Macmillan, 1901, p. 238
- ^ Dom Dunstan Adams, What is Prayer?, Gracewing Publishing, 1999, p. 48
- ^ Father John J Pasquini, John J. Pasquini, True Christianity: The Catholic Way, iUniverse, 2003, p. 105
- ^ Augustus John Cuthbert Hare, Walks in Rome, Volume 1, Adamant Media Corporation, 2005, p. 201
- ^ Catholic Encyclopedia, The Ass (in Caricature of Christian Beliefs and Practices)
- ^ The Crucifixion and Docetic Christology Archived July 4, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ A Sociological Analysis of Graffiti Archived October 4, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Charles William King, Gnostics and their Remains, 1887, p. 433 note 12
- ^ Schiller, 89–91, fig. 321
- ^ a b Elizabeth A. Dreyer, The Cross in Christian Tradition: From Paul to Bonaventure, Paulist Press, 2001, pp. 21–22.
- ^ Schiller, 89–90, figs. 322–326
- ^ Smith, Julia J. (1 January 1984). "Donne and the Crucifixion". The Modern Language Review. 79 (3): 513–525. doi:10.2307/3728859. JSTOR 3728859.
- ^ R. Kevin Seasoltz ,A Sense Of The Sacred: Theological Foundations Of Christian Architecture And Art, 2005, Continuum International Publishing Group, pp. 99–110.
- ^ Adomnan of Iona. Life of St Columba, Penguin books, 1995.
- ^ Schiller, 93
- ^ Schiller, 99 quoted, 94–99
- ^ Dalton, Ormonde Maddock (1911). Byzantine Art and Archaeology. New York, NY: Dove Publications Inc. pp. 263–264, 399, 412.
- ^ Hatzidakis & Drakopoulou 1997, pp. 442–443.
- ^ Angold, Michael (2014). The Fall of Constantinople to the Ottomans Context and Consequences. New York, New York: Taylor & Francis. pp. 50–51. ISBN 9781317880516.
- ^ Jones, Lynn (2014). Byzantine Images and Their Afterlives Essays in Honor of Annemarie Weyl Carr. London, United Kingdom: Ashgate Publishing Limited. p. 172. ISBN 9781409442912.
- ^ Hatzidakis & Drakopoulou 1997, pp. 259–263.
- ^ Staff Writers (July 11, 2021). "The Crucifixion, second half of the 15th century". National Gallery Alexandros Soutzos Museum. Archived from the original on September 21, 2023. Retrieved April 12, 2024.
- ^ Hatzidakis & Drakopoulou 1997, pp. 141–149.
- ^ Tselenti-Papadopoulou, Niki G. (2002). Οι Εικονες της Ελληνικης Αδελφοτητας της Βενετιας απο το 16ο εως το Πρωτο Μισο του 20ου Αιωνα: Αρχειακη Τεκμηριωση [The Icons of the Greek Brotherhood of Venice from 1600 to the First Half of the 20th Century] (PDF). Athens: Ministry of Culture Publication of the Archaeological Bulletin No. 81. p. 205. ISBN 960-214-221-9.
- ^ Hatzidakis & Drakopoulou 1997, pp. 203–205.
- ^ Schiller, 99 quoted, 94–99, 105–106
- ^ Schiller, 141 quoted, 105–106, 141–142
- ^ Sara Lipton, ""Images and their Uses" in The Cambridge History of Christianity: Christianity in Western Europe c. 1000 - c.1500, ed. Miri Rubin and Walter Simons (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009), pp. 254-283
- ^ Sara Lipton, ""Images and their Uses" in The Cambridge History of Christianity: Christianity in Western Europe c. 1000 – c.1500, ed. Miri Rubin and Walter Simons (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009), pp. 254–283
- ^ Stracke, Richard. "The Pelican Symbol in Christian Iconography". www.christianiconography.info. Retrieved 2023-04-01.
- ^ Schiller, 151–158
- ^ Schiller, 151–152
- ^ Irene Earls, Renaissance Art: A Topical Dictionary, 1987, Greenwood Press, p. 73.
- ^ Rookmaaker, H. R. (1970). Modern Art and the Death of a Culture. Crossway Books. p. 73. ISBN 978-0-89107-799-2.
- ^ Macdonald, Fiona (May 11, 2016). "The painter who entered the fourth dimension". BBC Culture.
- ^ Bolyer, Gary (January 21, 2013). "Review of Crucifixion Corpus Hypercubus by Salvador Dali". Retrieved July 7, 2018.
- ^ Baker, John (2013). Porfirio DiDonna: The Shape of Knowing. Brooklyn, NY: Pressed Wafer. p. 36. ISBN 978-1-940396-01-9.
- ^ Gary Younge. "The Wales Window of Alabama". Produced by Nicola Swords. BBC Radio 4.
- ^ "Robert Mapplethorpe, Self Portrait 1975, The Masters' Gallery". cegur.com. Archived from the original on 2020-02-23. Retrieved 2009-12-10.
- ^ Murray, Timothy (1993). Like a film: Ideological fantasy on screen, camera and canvas. Routlegde. p. 84. ISBN 978-0-415-07733-0.
- ^ Heartney, Eleanor (July 1998). "A consecrated critic – profile of popular television art critic Sister Wendy Beckett". Art in America. Retrieved 2010-09-08.
- ^ Reichert, Marcus; Rozzo, Edward (2007). Art and Ego. Foreword by Simon Lane. London: Ziggurat Books. pp. 30–31. ISBN 978-0-9546656-5-4.
- ^ RCenedella Gallery Online Archived 2011-07-15 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ The agony and the ecstasy. The Observer, 26 May 2002
- ^ "Crucified Skinhead, Hate Symbols Database". Anti-Defamation League. Archived from the original on 2019-09-08. Retrieved 2019-12-15.
- ^ Stanley, Sarah (June 2009). "Drawing on God: Theology in Graphic Novels". Theological Librarianship. 2 (1): 83–88. doi:10.31046/tl.v2i1.72.
- ^ Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth pg. 51
- ^ "1989 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award". hahnlibrary.net.
- ^ Irvine, Alex (2008), "Animal Man", in Dougall, Alastair (ed.), The Vertigo Encyclopedia, New York: Dorling Kindersley, p. 27, ISBN 978-0-7566-4122-1, OCLC 213309015
- ^ Garrett, Greg (2008). Holy superheroes!: exploring the sacred in comics, graphic novels, and film. Westminster John Knox Press. pp. 17–19. ISBN 978-0-664-23191-0. Retrieved 2011-06-04.
- ^ "Is the new Superman meant to be Jesus?". BBC News. July 28, 2006. Retrieved April 30, 2010.
- ^ Batman: Holy Terror, pg. 39
- ^ a b "Viz Edits Fullmetal Alchemist". Anime News Network. September 11, 2006. Retrieved September 13, 2009.
- ^ Drazen, Patrick (2003). "Faith-Based: Christianity, Shinto, and Other Religions in Anime". Anime Explosion! The What? Why? & Wow! Of Japanese Animation. Stone Bridge Press, LLC. pp. 142–154. ISBN 978-1-880656-72-3. OCLC 50898281.
- ^ Drazen 2003, p. 149
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References
edit- Schiller, Gertrud, Iconography of Christian Art, Vol. II,1972 (English translation from German), Lund Humphries, London, ISBN 0-85331-324-5
- Hatzidakis, Manolis; Drakopoulou, Evgenia (1997). Έλληνες Ζωγράφοι μετά την Άλωση (1450-1830). Τόμος 2: Καβαλλάρος - Ψαθόπουλος [Greek Painters after the Fall of Constantinople (1450-1830). Volume 2: Kavallaros - Psathopoulos]. Athens: Center for Modern Greek Studies, National Research Foundation. hdl:10442/14088. ISBN 960-7916-00-X.
External links
edit- Age of spirituality : late antique and early Christian art, third to seventh century from The Metropolitan Museum of Art