James Tissot: What Our Lord Saw from the Cross (Ce que voyait Notre-Seigneur sur la Croix) - Click on image for larger version
In the most memorable, and even notorious, of Tissot’s images, Christ looks out at the crowd of spectators arrayed before him: Mary Magdalene, in the immediate foreground, with her long red tresses swirling down her back, kneels at his feet, which are clearly visible at the bottom center of the composition. Beyond her, the Virgin Mary clutches her breast, while John the Evangelist looks up with hands clasped.
The artist here adopts the point of view of Christ himself. Few painters have conceived a composition this daring. In his audacity, however, Tissot remains true to his artistic vision: ultimately, the image is an exercise in empathy. Its point is to give viewers, accustomed to looking at the event from the outside, a rare opportunity to imagine themselves in Christ’s place and consider his final thoughts and feelings as he gazed on the enemies and friends who were witnessing, or participating in, his death.
H/T to Paul Between the 'Burgh and the City
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...I wonder if Jesus closed his eyes because he couldn't look at them...
ReplyDeleteor because of the betrayal...
I know he is God, but he was also human...
sometimes I couldn't- can't- look at people because it hurts too much...
I think when we are not heard or believed it is better to just "close our eyes" and be silent...