Mary Anointing Jesus Analysis

Superior Essays
Bruce Conner is a post-war artist who began his career in San Francisco and became renowned for his works in diverse fields of film, photography, assemblages, painting, and sculpture. He was born in 1933 and passed away 2008. Nearing the end of his career in 2003, Bruce revisited collages from his earlier works and with the help of digital technology, he translated them into tapestries (Frieling and Garrels 12). One of these resulting pieces is Mary Anointing Jesus with the Precious Oils of Spikenard. The piece was first imagined in 1987 and then recreated with the assistance of Donald Farnsworth in 2003. Currently it is on display in the San Francisco Museum of Modern Arts which I had a chance to visit recently. Out of the countless artworks …show more content…
Yet upon a second more detailed examination, traditional elements of composition began to appear. In the center of the piece, there is an identifiable pyramidal structure of the figures, with the reclining nude upon the boot at the base, the three figures, Mary, Jesus, and the contemplative apostle in the back, making up the body of the pyramid, and sun-ring at the top. Vanity and lust fall below qualities of compassion and wisdom, which ultimately is under godliness and piety. Another interesting element of composition is the way Conner uses seemingly random spheres in the composition to guide the viewer’s eyes across the tapestry. Starting with the skull within the palms of the headless man it extends down the Jesus’ shoulder, then down the arms of the reclining nude, and back up to the skull of the x-rayed figure on the right. This guided passage through the painting reveals a much more coherent narration of the themes which Conner planted in the piece. Starting with the morbid realization of the inevitability of death, to the ever-shifting subjective nature of beauty, paralleled by changing ways of which humanity beholds itself and nature (in this case, through the

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    The striking contrast of the white sheep coupled with the control of perspective, the artist draws our attention towards the focal point of Jesus’s…

    • 796 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    I believe the artist painted this for everyone, but especially for those who believe in Christ, and who have faith, and hope in Him. This painting is especially meaningful to me, and gives me hope, and leaves me with a desire to give others that same hope that I feel. A question I had about Carl Bloch, is what influenced him to paint “Christ Healing the Sick at Bethesda”. As I did more research on the artist, I found that at age 25 Bloch went to Rome on a travel grant. In Rome, Bloch was inspired by the work of the Italian masters, and this influenced him to paint scenes of great events.…

    • 2051 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Williams Memorial Chapel

    • 928 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The piece in the chapel focuses around the trinity, Watson said, and the design consists of triangles made out of biblical spices such as frankincense and myrrh. “(That installment is) about trying to understand God and the glimpses that he gives to us in even things as simple as the beauty of aroma, color, shapes and things fitting together,” Watson said. “But it’s also about the absurdity of it. I mean, God is not triangular.”…

    • 928 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    Northern Baroque Art

    • 1558 Words
    • 7 Pages

    In the foreground, muscular men evocative of Michelangelo’s figures, struggle to lift the weight of Christ and the cross, their bodies thrusting out of the canvas and onto the viewer, thereby forcing the viewer to confront Christ’s crucifixion head on. Although Rubens's altarpiece illustrates the influence and desire of the Catholic Church to reaffirm faith in the church, as well as the influence of the Council of Trent (i.e. clear and accurate depiction of the crucifixion), Rubens's altarpiece illustrates the dynamism and emotion indicative of Baroque Art, as well as the religious quality of Flemish…

    • 1558 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Many artworks during the Renaissance were influenced by the preceding era, the Middle Ages. During the Middle Ages, depictions of biblical tales were quite common and this trend continued into the Renaissance. The Renaissance painting, The Crucifixion, portrays the biblical story of the crucifixion of Jesus as well as the damnation and salvation. This painting was done by Dreux Budé Master, possibly André d 'Ypres, before 1450. In The Crucifixion, Dreux Budé Master…

    • 759 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    Helena Maria Viramontes ' novel Under the Feet of Jesus present the true realities that a young thirteen-year-old girl, Estrella, and her family encounter as migrant laborers. Working as migrant laborers, Estrella and her family face conflicts with the legal system, the perpetual state of being short on money, and the depiction of their labor. Viramontes’s novel effortlessly demonstrates how the life of migrant workers are both demanding and brutal through exemplifying Estrella and her family 's life as migrant workers. One of the biggest hardships that Estrella and her family encounter relate to the fact that their work depends on factors that they cannot control.…

    • 1710 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Christ has long brown/rust color hair, with a rust/brown color stick woven head band. The stick woven head band has a texture of rough, sharp sticks. In the middle of Christ’s face and head band is a silver nail, nailed through his flesh, causing red color blood to drip down his face. Fetti’s use of visual elements of art illustrates to the viewers the anguish and destress Christ felt during that time.…

    • 952 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    The Metropolitan Museum of Art is the world's largest encyclopedic art museums, located on the eastern side of the central park, in Manhattan. With more than 2 million works of art collection from around the globe, it also has collection from per-historic timeline. Each works of arts in here, organized by their own access codes, and placed into a specific gallery from a specific time period within their respective fields. The artwork that I chose to talk about today is a magnificent altarpiece, named “The Crucifixion; The Last Judgment” by artist Jan van Eyck. Created in the early Renaissance period, both The Crucifixion and The Last Judgment were done in two separate panels.…

    • 1466 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Great Essays

    The paintings exercise an intense and covert power over their audiences in a manner that evokes different feelings and perceptions. As such, it is not uncommon to find admirers and critics alike. The paintings are universally recognized and appreciated while at the same time, they continue to attract endless criticism and scrutiny. Caravaggio and da Vinci’s paintings exhibit salient gestures and expressive faces. The paintings are symbolic of the two spiritual Biblical moments that took place during Jesus’ life on earth.…

    • 1478 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Renaissance was an age of learning and revival of classic Roman and Greek art and culture. Paintings of the Renaissance often focused on religion but also focused on creating realistic humans. In 1518 the Renaissance painter Titian completed his masterpiece “The Assumption of the Virgin” for the altar Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari Basilica in Venice. The piece is a depiction of the Virgin Mary rising from Earth into heaven through angels taking her away from the Apostles and towards God. The painting promotes the idea that the Apostles, the Virgin Mary, and God are powerful, religious, and it promotes the Catholic Church.…

    • 1195 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The panel of The Last Judgement also establishes hidden meanings and symbols within the painting. Firstly, the consubstantial ideology of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit is also subtlety illustrated by connecting the heads of Christ, Virgin Mary and John the Baptist on the top right…

    • 1723 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The dimensions of this project were 12 feet by 18 feet 8 inches. It was painted on a canvas with oil paints for the Church of San Giorgio Maggiore. This piece uses Tintoretto’s idea of having figures appear to be rotating around an axis point, seen in the wispy angels at the top of the canvas. Jesus’s disciples appear to be indifferent to him and take no notice of the ghostly angels above. The painting shows a dominant characteristic of Tintoretto’s, the recession of the table cutting the picture and creating an illusion of rapid spatial movement (Adams 374).…

    • 1461 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Altarpiece of St. Clare: A Visual Biography The Altarpiece of St. Clare was created by an anonymous artist around 1280. The media used in this piece are tempera paint and wood. This was a common choice among artist during the middle ages.…

    • 792 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    I’ve recently taken an interest in the work of London fashion photographer, Miles Aldridge, particularly his portraits regarding the Virgin Mary. My reason for this is because I’m basing my studio portraiture project on The Annunciation by Dante Gabriel Rossetti so Christian iconography, particularly the Madonna is relevant to my research. This series of portraits is entitled Immaculée and was originally featured in international fashion magazine, Numéro in 2007.…

    • 756 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Byzantine Art Analysis

    • 1452 Words
    • 6 Pages

    In this essay I will compare and contrast using contextual factors two murals. The first is Emperor Justinian, Bishop Maximus and Attendants, a mosaic on the wall of the Sanctuary in Italy from the Byzantine era. The second being Raphael 's School of Athens, found on the wall of the Apostolic Palace, Rome painted during the Renaissance. Emperor Justinian, Bishop Maximianus and Attendants, was created for religious purposes, as was a lot of the art produced during the early Byzantine Empire. In 324 CE Constantine ‘ the Great’ was a Christian emperor who set up Constantinople, originally Byzantine, a city in the east as another city to rule Christianity from, alongside the capital Rome.…

    • 1452 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays