Mary regretted many of the things she had done in her youth. Wishing to repent, she devoted herself to a life of solitary contemplation in the wilderness. For thirty years she lived as a hermit in a cave prepared for her by angels. Over time, her clothes rotted away and her hair grew and grew until it covered her entire body.
During the last years of Mary's life, a host of angels lifted her toward the heavens seven times a day. One day a local priest witnessed this event. Mary identified herself to the dumbstruck priest and sent him to tell the bishop to look for her on a specified day. On that day the bishop forgave Mary for the sins of her youth. Mary then died and her soul rose to heaven. After her death, Mary continued to perform miracles for those who prayed to her.
Saints
The story of Mary Magdalene's work, exile, and death was
recounted in a popular 13th-century collection of stories called The Golden
Legend by Jacobus de Voragine (ja-KOH-bus duh ve-RAJ-i-nee). The Golden
Legend was essentially a layperson's version of the lectionaries, or lives
of the saints, which were read on each saint's feast day during the year. As
an archbishop of Genoa, Voragine was familiar with these texts known chiefly to
church clerks.
The saints - the heroes of the Middle Ages and Renaissance - were role models of perfection, possessing divine wisdom, super strength, and unwavering devotion. These exemplars of Christian virtues frequently appeared in altarpiece paintings, inspiring worshipers to emulate their behavior.
The Elevation Elevation of the Magdalen
Peter Strub's (stroob) painting The Elevation Elevation of the Magdalen
shows Mary, covered with hair, being lifted up by 14
angels. A golden halo surrounds her idealistically youthful
face, which shows no signs of her 30-year stay in the wilderness. Her
abundantly flowing red hair is a common ATTRIBUTE, referring to her humble
drying of Jesus' feet. Far less typical is the animal-like fur that covers
much of her idealized body. Mary folds her hands over her chest, which is not
covered by fur. Her knees are also exposed, all hair evidently worn away from
kneeling in constant prayer. The angels discreetly cover her lower abdomen
with a crisply draped cloth. From the mountainous landscape below, a priest
looks up at the miraculous vision.
Style
Peter Strüb's tempera painting The Elevation of the
Magdalen is for the most part typical of German Renaissance art. The flat
gold BACKGROUND, a characteristic feature of medieval art, remained a popular
tradition in religious painting well into the Renaissance. The gold suggests
that the subject is holy and bathed in heavenly light. By contrast, the
detailed landscape below Mary is very much a part of the earthly realm.
Typical of German painters of his era who rendered their native landscape in
great detail, Strub painted Mary Magdalene in a mountainous German
landscape, rather than in southern France. Fine realistic details abound, from
the leafy trees and craggy rocks to the individual hairs of Mary's fur suit and
the soft feathers of the angels' wings. This attention to detail is one of the
most characteristic traits of German Renaissance art.
3. Below Mary is a detailed NATURALISTIC landscape. Does the sky behind her look similarly naturalistic? (No. BACKGROUND is covered with GOLD LEAF.) Why might an artist use gold on a background? Explain the popularity of using gold as a background in religious painting to indicate a sacred subject and to reflect light.
4. Strüb and his contemporaries during the German RENAISSANCE sought to IDEALIZE their subjects. They believed that artists should strive to represent perfection even if that perfection was absent in real nature. For example, the story of Mary Magdalene tells us that hair grew over her entire body, but Strüb did not paint hair on Mary's knees and breasts. Lack of hair on Mary's knees suggests her kneeling in prayer, while lack of hair on Mary's breasts signifies her ideal feminine beauty. How else has Strüb idealized his subject? Clue: The story of Mary Magdalene tells us she lived in a cave for 30 years before angels daily lifted her toward heaven! Does Mary look as if she lived in a cave for 30 years in this painting? Why not?
2. Which other works of art have you seen in this image set that represent a story in which the character was forgiven? (Herakles on the hydria, image 7.) Why did Herakles need forgiveness? (He murdered his family.) What did Herakles have to do to be forgiven? (He performed the 12 Labors, including slaying the Nemean Lion and the Wild Boar of Erymanthus.)
3. Strüb painted Mary in a German landscape rather than the landscape of southern France, where she actually lived. Why might he have done this? (Although we don't know for sure, Strüb may not have known the landscape of southern France. He also may have wanted to associate his homeland with a holy event.)
4. During the Middle Ages, many people looked to the saints as behavioral role models. Who are your role models? Do pictures of your role models exist? Where?
5. The artist who CAST the bronze Oceanus (image 8) also used precious metals in his work, but for a different purpose. Explain the different reasons for using precious metals in the two works of art. The bronze Oceanus included silver and copper highlights in order to increase the value of the sculpture. Strüb used GOLD LEAF on the BACKGROUND of his painting not only to increase the value of the painting, but also to symbolize the value of the subject matter, Mary Magdalene.