Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
DR. BETH HARRIS: We're in the Louvre,
and we're looking at a painting by Raphael called La Belle
Jardinire.
And it's a lovely Raphael Madonna
and Child with the infant Saint John the Baptist
in that pyramid composition that we so often
associate with the High Renaissance.
DR. STEVEN ZUCKER: What's interesting
is that the *** Mary is not in a religious environment.
We see no archways, and she's got no throne.
If we're to argue that she had a throne at all,
it would be the throne of nature.
She sits on a rock in a field with a beautiful atmospheric
perspective behind her creating this lovely, verdant
environment.
DR. BETH HARRIS: As we look down at the foreground,
we seen plants, perhaps the edge of a pond, and little flowers.
The loveliest passages to me are the way
that Christ, on the left, stands on his mother's foot,
really showing that kind of dependence on his mother
and yet also a growing sense of independence
as he seeks to take the book out of her hands
and looks up at her.
And of course the content of that book
foretells his own demise.
It foretells the crucifixion.
DR. STEVEN ZUCKER: And the look on Mary's face
is one that suggests that she knows this.
She's looking at him to, in a sense, gauge
whether or not he's ready for that knowledge.
DR. BETH HARRIS: She puts her right arm around him,
protecting him, and seems to hesitate
for a moment with her left hand whether to allow
him to take that book or not.
Saint John the Baptist, who kneels in prayer toward Christ,
is in a very graceful pose as he kneels down on his right knee,
tilts his neck up, and looks up at Christ.
We have that High Renaissance gracefulness and ideal beauty.
DR. STEVEN ZUCKER: Let's look for just a moment
at the gazes within the painting.
I think you're right to start with John the Baptist
and his eyes gazing up at Christ, who in turn's body
and face moves up to Mary.
And Mary then returns that gaze, in a sense our gaze,
back down to Christ.
DR. BETH HARRIS: So everyone's gaze
is really focused on Christ.
DR. STEVEN ZUCKER: Yep, and we're
in the middle of that triangle as we
watch them look at each other.
DR. BETH HARRIS: And Mary's ideally beautiful.
And we have only the faintest outline of a halo.
That halo is disappearing as we enter the High Renaissance,
because the figures exude a kind of divinity
by their ideal beauty.
We don't need that symbol of a halo anymore.
DR. STEVEN ZUCKER: And for Raphael,
its nature that takes on that role.
No longer are those stage props of divinity necessary,
as you said.
But it's the landscape itself.
It's God's world that he's created
that is an expression of divinity.
And it's beauty itself that is the expression
of divinity here, Mary's beauty, Christ's beauty,
and even John's beauty.