BIBLE PICTURES © Serge Ceruti and Gérard Dufour 2008
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You have chosen this picture The Ascension; Jean COLOMBE; 1485-89; illuminated manuscript ; «Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry»; Musée Condé, Chantilly, France.
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The Ascension of Christ |
WHAT YOU CAN SEE IN THIS PICTURE
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... AND IN OTHER PICTURES
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It should not be confused with |
The Transfiguration; Lorenzo LOTTO; 1510-12; oil on wood; Pinacoteca Comunale, Recanati, Italy.
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In this picture Jesus is elevated above the ground where his disciples are. But this is the Transfiguration. He is with Moses and Elijah and there are only three apostles. (See The Transfiguration) |
The Assumption of the Virgin; Nicolas POUSSIN; 1650; oil on canvas; Musée du Louvre, Paris.
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Mary is lifted to Heaven by some angels; this is her Assumption. Sometimes her death bed can be seen on the ground together with the Apostles who are around her. (See the Woman of the Apocalypse).
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The Resurrection; El GRECO; 1596-1610; oil on canvas, altarpiece, College of Dona Maria; Toledo, Spain.
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The risen Christ is represented in his ascent above a crowd, but the latter is made up of soldiers guarding the tomb; moreover Christ often holds the banner of Easter. (See the Resurrection of Christ) |
THE BIBLICAL NARRATIVE
The Ascension; Jean COLOMBE; 1485-89; illuminated manuscript ; «Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry»; Musée Condé, Chantilly, France.
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The Ascension of Christ |
The Acts of the Apostles, chapter 1 After the Resurrection, the Apostles asked Jesus, saying:
: "Lord, will you at this time restore
again the kingdom to Israel?" And he said to them : "It
is not for you to know the times or the seasons, which the Father has
put in his own power..."
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Comment Since Christians speak about the Incarnation of the Son of God as a “descent”, it is natural to use the metaphor of the ascent to designate the entry of the risen Christ into the glory of his Father.
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SIMILAR PICTURES
The Ascension of Christ |
The Ascension; Jean COLOMBE; 1485-89; illuminated manuscript ; «Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry»; Musée Condé, Chantilly, France.
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The true representation of the Ascension starts with a big cloud from which emerges only Jesus’ head or which, on the contrary, conceals it completely except for his feet that are still visible. The Jesus is represented in full, either standing or sitting on his throne, which can generate some confusion with the Transfiguration. Jesus is lifted from a rock. The medieval drawing engraves the feet of Christ but refrains from representing the Heaven; Giotto’s painting creates two separate registers for the angels.
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The Ascension, coloured pen drawing from “Speculum Humanae Salvationis”; manuscript MMW 10 B 34; Meermanno Westreenianum, Koninklijke Bibliotheek, The Hague
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The Ascension; GIOTTO di Bondone; 1304-06; fresco; Scrovegni Chapel, Padua, Italy.
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While Garofalo insists on the materiality of the Ascension, Doré transforms it into a vision.
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L’Ascension du Christ; GAROFALO ; 1510-20 huile sur panneau ; Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica, Rome
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The Ascension; Gustave DORÉ; 1865 engraving from “the Holy Bible”.
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In the Renaissance, this
ascension came close to the apotheosis of pagan heroes who were deified
after their death and received by the gods into the heavens. Tintoretto goes back to traditional elements but, by building a view from above, he creates a movement of ascent.
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The Ascension; Jacopo Tintoretto; 1578-81; oil on canvas; Scuola di San Rocco, Venice.
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The Ascension; Jean COLOMBE; 1485-89; illuminated manuscript ; «Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry»; Musée Condé, Chantilly, France.
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The Ascension of Christ |
Ascension, assumption, apotheosis… What is the relation between the earthly world and the divine world?
In the Bible as in pagan antiquity, the divine world is high up in the heaven, hence a vertical relation but, contrary to paganism, the biblical heaven also evokes the future since the abode of the elect is called the Kingdom of Heaven; thus any man is invited to go up to heaven by following the Christ of the Ascension. One speaks of the Ascension for the risen Christ going up to heaven, of the Assumption for Mary who is called there body and soul (it is the feast celebrated on August 15th). As for the apotheosis, it is derived from the Greek for “deification” but, since the 17th century, the word has been used for a triumph and to designate the ascent to heaven of the souls of saints.
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BIBLE PICTURES © Serge Ceruti and Gérard Dufour 2008