Virgin of Mercy
Virgin of Mercy | |
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Mother of Mercy Madonna of Mercy, Our Lady of Mercy | |
Venerated in | Roman Catholic Church |
Feast | 24 September |
Attributes | Virgin Mary, sheltering mantle |
Patronage | Dominican Republic, Barcelona, Paita |
The Virgin of Mercy is a subject in Christian Art,[1] showing a group of people sheltering for protection under the outspread cloak, or pallium of the Virgin Mary. It was especially popular in Italy from the 13th to 16th centuries, often as a specialised form of votive portrait, and is also found in other countries and later art, especially Catalonia and Latin America. In Italian it is known as the Madonna della Misericordia (Madonna of Mercy), in German as the Schutzmantelmadonna (Sheltering-cloak Madonna), in Spanish Virgen de la Merced or Nuestra Señora de las Mercedes (Our Lady of Mercy), in French as the Vièrge au Manteau or Vierge de Miséricorde (Virgin with a cloak or Virgin of Mercy) and in Catalan as the Mare de Déu de la Mercè.
Image and origins
Usually the Virgin is standing alone, though if angels hold up the cloak, she is free to hold the infant Christ. The people sheltered normally kneel, and are of necessity shown usually at a much smaller scale. These may represent all members of Christian society, with royal crowns, mitres and a papal tiara in the front rows, or represent the local population. The subject was often commissioned by specific groups such as families, confraternities, guilds or convents or abbeys, and then the figures represent these specific groups, as shown by their dress, or by the 15th century individual portraits. Sometimes arrows rain down from above, which the cloak prevents from reaching the people.[2]
Probably the oldest version known is a small panel by Duccio of c. 1280, with three Franciscan friars under the cloak, in the Pinacoteca in Siena. Here the Virgin sits, only one side of the cloak is extended, and the Virgin holds her child on her knee with her other hand. An miniature of c. 1274 from the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia also shows a variant of the motif, as do 13th century paintings in Cyprus, such as an icon in the Byzantine Museum in the Archbishop's Palace, Nicosia.[3] The common factor between all these is the influence and presence of Western mendicant orders, especially the Franciscans, who appear to have been important in spreading this form of iconography.[4]
The immediate inspiration of the iconography comes from a vision reported in the Dialogus Miraculorum of the Cistercian Caesarius of Heisterbach which circulated widely from about 1230.[5] Beyond that, the origins of the image may relate to rituals and a vision or miracle connected with a famous icon in the Blachernae Church in Constantinople.[6] This gave rise in the Byzantine Rite (Eastern Orthodox and Eastern Catholic Churches) to the Pokrov icons, although the image is not found in Byzantine art. In the Pokrov icons the thought is similar, but the image is usually less literal — the veil with which the Virgin protects mankind is small and held either in her hands or by two angels,[7] though the Western version with a larger cloak is found in some Eastern Orthodox icons, one of a number of Western iconographic features that infiltrated Orthodox art, whether in Cyprus under the Crusaders[8] or 16th-century Eastern Europe.
Usually the image, whether in sculpture or painting, stands by itself, but in the most famous example, the Madonna della Misericordia altarpiece in Sansepolcro by Piero della Francesca, of 1445-62, the subject is the central panel of a large altarpiece, with a smaller Crucifixion above it, and many other panels. In the Spanish The Virgin of the Navigators of the 1530s, where those sheltered are a group connected with the Spanish voyages to the New World, including American indigenous peoples, the group is shown over a panorama of ships at rest in a harbour.
In Germany an almost identical image was used featuring Saint Ursula, usually holding her attribute of an arrow to avoid confusion.[9]
The image came in for special derision from Martin Luther, who compared it to "a hen with her chicks".[10]
Veneration
The liturgical feast day of Our Lady of Mercy is celebrated annually in the Latin Catholic calendar on September 24.
Churches dedicated to her include the cathedral of Guasdualito in Venezuela.
Other contexts
The term "Virgin of Mercy" is found in a number of other contexts not directly related to the image. It is a common translation of the Eleusa type of icon of the Virgin and Child. The Virgin of Mercy is patron saint of Barcelona, celebrated in the week-long La Mercè festival each year, but in this role is not especially associated with this type of image. The Order of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Mercy, founded, also in Barcelona, in 1218 by Saint Peter Nolasco, has used the image but is not particularly associated with it.
In Santería, the Virgin of Mercy is syncretized with Obatala.
Gallery
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Duccio, Madonna of the Franciscans, ca 1280, the earliest known painting of the subject.
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Lippo Memmi, 1350s. The couple at the front were probably the donors.
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Dominican version, with Child and saints
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Venice, on the 15th century guild hall of the shoemakers
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the Piero della Francesca altarpiece (frame removed)
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Enguerrand Charonton, 1452, sheltering a distinguished group, with donor portraits and saints.
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A modern replica of the statue shown above processes through Ravensburg, above a modern model of the old city
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16th century German, with the shelterers wearing only crowns and loincloths
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Zurbarán, 17th century Spanish, with a group of monks.
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Austrian version, c. 1510, with angels and child
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The Virgin of the Navigators, Seville, 1530s
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Eastern Orthodox icon, showing a broad protective cloak. Mid 17th century, Ukraine.
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Eastern Orthodox icon, with the Ukrainian cossack hetman Bohdan Khmelnytsky (at the right of image). Late 17 to early 18th century
See also
Notes
- ^ "Virgin of Mercy". Panduranga Gallery. Retrieved 25 September 2014.
- ^ Hall, 222
- ^ Evans, pp. 60-61 (with illustration), 461; Miniature Painting in the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia from the Twelfth to the Fourteenth Century, Sirarpie Der Nersessian, Sylvia Agémian, Annemarie Weyl Carr, Dumbarton Oaks, p. 159, 1993, ISBN 0-88402-202-1. A South German chalice may also be older, see Vasilake, 307, note 17.
- ^ Evans, p. 460
- ^ Imagining Childhood: Themes in the Imagery of Childhood, Erika Langmuir, p.237, note 56, Yale University Press, 2006, ISBN 0-300-10131-7
- ^ Vasilake, 308
- ^ Neil K. Moran; Singers in Late Byzantine and Slavonic Painting, p.126ff, BRILL, 1986, ISBN 90-04-07809-6
- ^ Vasilake, 307ff; 17th century Ukrainian example
- ^ See the Commons category note for three examples
- ^ Hall, 305
References
- Evans, Helen C. (ed.), Byzantium, Faith and Power (1261-1557), 2004, Metropolitan Museum of Art/Yale University Press, ISBN 1588391140
- James Hall, A History of Ideas and Images in Italian Art, 1983, John Murray, London, ISBN 0-7195-3971-4
- Maria Vasilakē; Images of the Mother of God: Perceptions of the Theotokos in Byzantium, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2005, ISBN 0-7546-3603-8,