The Anatomy of Sacred Art
Part I: Presence, Witness, and Transcendence
By Anthony Visco
“I was there when he laid the earth’s foundation; I was beside
him like an architect. I was his daily source of joy, always in his presence-
happy with the world and pleased with the human race.”
Proverb in praise of wisdom
As the Old Testament begins with the Creation of the cosmos and the
New Testament with the Incarnation of Christ, the Judeo Christian world
is reminded as to how the act of making becomes central to our faith.
As the act of imitating Creation and its Creator has been with human kind
since the earliest of all recorded forms and images, as architects and
artists, we recognize ourselves as the “created” imitating
our Creator in this great attempt to pay homage to our God, to our “Cause
without Cause”. Thus what is “man made” begins as a
small part, a means to seek and find our selves at first as separate from
our Maker. Yet the second and greater part is to make in order to seek
and find ourselves again within the greater “God-made” whole,
our communion. Our hopes are that what we make will fuse with what we
believe and both process and product will bring all closer to our Maker.
To imitate Creation is to celebrate the very entry of the Mystery into
Its own Creation.
To make sacred art is to wed one’s faith with one’s esthetics
in hopes to bring even closer, “the created” to our Creator,
to shorten the real or imagined gap between “the called” with
the Caller. When the artist answers, when this invitation is met successfully,
a covenant is formed; the work is sanctified. This covenant is then extended
from God to artist and from artist to fellow believers and finally back
to God again. It is this covenant that we wish to explore here. As faith
and aesthetic works combine, the work in turn is employed to reflect those
beliefs. As culture becomes infused with and by our trust and hope in
God, sacred art becomes an indeterminate good, a means by which we may
come together and witness the meeting of heaven and earth. Thus, sacred
art can not ever be the same give and take between artist and society
as secular art.
As Catholics in America, since the Sixties we have witnessed the wholesale
destruction of beauty, of figurative sacred art, in particular classical
architecture, statuary, and representational painting. As a result, the
reciprocity between our origins and our beliefs seem all but absent as
if a covenant that once was, never existed. These acts, conscious or unconscious,
present certain and profound questions not only of aesthetics but also
faith. They now need to be asked and hopefully answered.
First of all, can and did sacred art produce a covenant? What does covenant
mean here? How does it differ from the secular “give and take”
between artist and society? Does this covenant exist before the art is
ever made? Can there be a covenant without value? Can there be a faith
without an aesthetic? Can there be sacred art without a willful belief
in beauty? Finally, did Modernism indeed break the covenant?
All these questions need to be and have been asked in one way or another
for the last thirty years. Yet before answering such vital questions,
perhaps some discussion to the sacred art of our past and present would
help. Although the Church does not have or claim an official style, it
has always held that its art and architecture should actively participate
in its meaning and its message. Our architecture, sculpture, and painting
may indeed be external examples of our faith, extensions of a covenant.
Thus, they were never intended to be outside of our worship, at least
not until Modernism.
All classicism, with its painting, sculpture, drawing, and architecture,
has always been and remains a figurative and representational language.
If it is not literal it is metaphorical as the language of “embodiment”.
Our body’s design, reflected in bilateral architecture thus becomes
an extension of body Creation. If the Church has or has yet to choose
the classical mode as its official messenger, its preference is clear;
in sign and symbol, classical art and architecture have always been corporeal
and representative. But more importantly, what is the role of this corporeal
sacred art in the Church? Why do we choose the body to reveal the invisible?
For the Catholic Church the role and reason of using both the body and
its corporeal architecture is triune. Combined, it is when and where the
denotation, connotation, and implication join in order to embrace the
entire faith.
As Catholics, cross-culturally this triune reason has remained the same
for these two millennia; it is presence, witness, and transcendence. As
guideposts, they together give the church artist the tools to make works
that assist the faithful and guide them to the covenant. Much like its
matrix architecture, the function of religious statuary in the church
is to provide an experience of presence, give a sense of witness, and
lead to a state of transcendence. In order to accomplish this, the classical
has continually been employed as the best means. The four attributes of
presence are:
- It must be whole, its members interrelated, nothing incongruous, a self-contained
entity.
- It must show a proportionate likeness to what is recognizable, what
is knowable about the known. It must have similitude.
- Its poise, position, and the composition of place must appear to be
a result of its thought.
- It must contain both the average and the ideal.
To be whole, a self-contained entity must have its members interrelated.
Nothing appears incongruous as its members and their relativity part to
whole have an intelligible proportion. This use of proportion takes on
a greater role when and where we find it in sacred art. Everything in
creation is made in proportion to itself along with a proportion to everything
else in the universe. As there is nothing without proportion whether it
is matter or void, light or dark, sound or silence, and time, proportion
remains an idea in the Mind of Creation.
Alberti speaks to us of “membratura” or the memberdness
membrature of a building or body. In representational sculpture and painting,
this interrelatedness becomes mandatory. We in it become emblematic of
the Mystical Body. We are using the body not only as sign form here but
also as symbol.
Secondly a proportionate likeness to what is recognizable gives reassurance
as to what is known and what is knowable about the known. In sacred and
secular art likeness or similitude is the desire to have some likeness
apparent and that some value it has been assigned to that which is depicted.
Sacred art perhaps more than any other art form has for millennia struggled
with this concept of likeness and for very good reasons. How do we represent
the unseen without making the visible recognizable?
As classical proportion is the desire to know the comparative relationship
of one part or member to the whole, and to its other members, in as much
as it is resplendent in sacred art and architecture, what better metaphor
for the Church itself. How much is this desire of the part to know it’s
whole so like the desire of the faithful to know its part within the “Mystical
Body”. Thus, everything good seeks to take on a divine proportion
because everything has a divine purpose.
Third, poise, position, and the composition of place must appear to be
a result of its thought. The placement, arrangement, and composition of
sacred art need to reflect their purpose and role in our faith. Just as
our liturgy has an order, so must our art assist the liturgy in that order.
Here, the physical place has meaning and through placement, the object
helps direct us to the sacred within. St. Ignatius Loyola, (Spiritual
Exercises, 1548)“to see with the eye of the imagination the corporeal
place where the object one wishes to contemplate is found”. He calls
this “composition, seeing the place”. However, when and where
composition of place is not combined with purpose, when what we place
in the center is not central to our faith, when the object then indeed
we may provide ourselves with what fails to turn us inward and comprises
the covenant.
Like its secular partner, modernist liturgical art and architecture
became overly dependent on place in order to achieve a sense of content.
Just as placing sculpture outdoors didn’t make it public art, placing
inside a church didn’t make it liturgical. The abandonment of bilateral
symmetry discards the body and makes our architecture non-representative;
statues cannot be replaced by non-objective works and be considered statues.
Their content and placement must assist us in finding the order within
the work, the sacred within ourselves.
Lastly, all representative painting and sculpture contain both the average
and the ideal in varying degrees of proportion one to the other. The Cimabue
crucifix, a Franciscan commission, provided a model for both painters
and sculptors alike. This notion of gravity, the sense of human weight,
of compound convex forms of its members, reinforced the message of the
Poverello in his reminder that one could find the flesh of Christ in his
nearest neighbor. But above all, it contained something of the average
and the ideal in its form. Commissioned in 1252 by the Franciscans for
the church of Santa Croce in Florence, it was a shift not only form the
Christus Triumphans of the Medieval model to the Christus Patiens of St.
Francis, but also to an anatomical model that opened the door for sculptors
as well as painters. Anatomy had remained buried in the antique not to
be unveiled and reinvented through Franciscan spirituality.
The need to demonstrate the effect of gravity on body weight, of convex
form, of a greater sense of the average and the ideal gave the artists
of the Quatrocento a means to depict The Incarnation. For the artist this
means seeking and finding the average and the ideal in every portrayal
is a human attempt to imitate the union of the human and the divine. We
the average, the human, seek unity with the ideal, the divine just as
God has revealed the humanity of Christ to all creation.
If beauty is at the heart of the covenant, it not only speaks of a particular
saint or scene from the life of Christ in stone or paint but it draws
the whole of humanity into itself to witness its covenant. After all,
more people have “witnessed” the Sistine Chapel Ceiling in
the past fifty years than in the past five hundred. Yet the idea of witness
was always present in classical church art and architecture. Witness differs
from presence in the sense that the interior and exterior are in synch.
It is where the internal and external experiences are one. The four attributes
of witness are:
- The work is open and all-inclusive; that is, it does not alienate the
viewer.
- It must look like the action is still with us, still occurring and/or
ongoing.
- It has credible impact on the senses and through the senses.
- The experience of the subject depicted is internalized in the viewer.
As the Church is open and inclusive, so must the arts that represent
it. They cannot alienate the viewer. From our beginnings, the earliest
Christian art was based on and in for lack of a better term, a “figurative”
language used in painting, sculpture, and architecture. Its reasons for
choosing an anthropomorphic language were obvious; it was, as it remains
a representative language in which the signs and symbols of Incarnation
theology could be best presented. Its vernacular is corporeal. It finds
its language in scripture, as scripture is resplendent with metaphors
placing Christ, his disciples and us in architectural terms, “foundation”,
“living stones”, “columns”, “mansion”,
“pillar”, and corner stone, all have become part of Christian
sign and symbol This vernacular remains open and inclusive as figurative
art and architecture continue to take on the language of the body, its
bilateral symmetry, its frontality, and most of all, its proportions.
All lend and will always give a most humanized way of representing and
expressing the Logos Incarnatus. Without figurative representation we
would lose this sense of inclusive embodiment, this sense of the corporeal,
and of ourselves within the Incarnate Christ. There can be nothing bodily
alien to us here less it loses credibility to our own sense of body. With
it we find our place as “living stones” with Christ as the
Corner Stone. Thus our bodies as well as our being become evidence that
this covenant to make and to make holy exists before the art is ever made.
If the covenant is to speak, the conversation must be ongoing. It must
look like the action is still with us, that this silent drama is still
speaks. Sacred art must be given a voice by artist and architect and speak
for all of us. Yet, what is said must be modeled on the Living Word, that
is, the voice that can never be meaningless, never be non-objective, and
never be non-representational, a voice that cannot be self contradictory.
As Donatello spoke to his sculpture of the prophet Habakkuk, his Zuccone,
he didn’t simply hit the statue with his mallet and say “Parla!”
(“Speak!”). Better, he commanded it, “Favela! Favela!”,
Tell the story! Tell the story! in hopes that it, in turn might speak
to others.
All life forms “push out”, that is they are convex, full as
well as multidirectional in their cross sections. They have a credible
impact on the senses and are realized through the senses. Convexity is
a sign and tells us that the form is alive, still living, still growing,
still breathing. Just as the columns of the Orders push out, full with
entasis, they imitate the convexities and surface tension of living flesh,
of ripe fruit, the fullness of life itself. This idea of fullness has
always been a hallmark of the classical order in Western art and architecture.
As the figures of the medieval world were designed as integrated elements
of church architecture, mainly in relief, in clustered columns, and in
portals, the figures of the Cinquecento were became entities in themselves,
fully developed in the round, many appearing to be the same size and in
the same air as the worshippers. There was no sense of alienation here.
As we find concavities interior within the body’s skeleton make
room for convexities, they become analogous to the concave interiors of
Catholic classical architecture. With its domes, its niches, its naves
and its sanctuaries, these interiors are designed to be filled with murals
and mosaics, sculpture and reliefs. But more importantly, they are to
be filled with us, with our bodies and most importantly, the Soul of Christ,
His Holy Spirit. As we are told in the Constitution of the Church, “fills
the Church, which is His Body and His fullness, with His divine gifts,
so that she may grow and reach all the fullness of God”. (The Dimensions
of the Church, Avery Dulles
Throughout the centuries, this figurative language has been much more
a history of our spiritual evolution than it has been of our cultural.
It is the language of witness in which the experience of the subject is
internalized in the viewer. As we go from Early Christian to Renaissance,
from Rococo to contemporary classicism, the variety of manifestations
have provided us with pictorial, sculptural models from the most static
to the most dynamic compositions. The artistic and spiritual goals were
to make the best for the Best; the goal always to bring witness. We only
have to look at the wall paintings of the first century catacombs and
see their resemblance or lack there of, to the works of Pompeii frescos.
Of course the quality is lacking here but their place never compromised
the covenant. The awkward drawing and modeling are crude. Yet we can witness
the intention that this was the best offered here. After all, this “underground
society” could not employ the best artists of their time openly.
But as the Early Church was searching for her artists within the flock,
the work was to be done by believers, not “hired hands”. There
is no sense of feigned naivete in these works as the experience of the
viewed is offered to the viewer.
But presence and witness are noting, incomplete if they do not lead us
to transcendence. For it is here that the cycle, the triune purpose is
revealed. It is here where our covenant becomes realized as artifice,
faithful, and Godhead take their rightful place. The four attributes of
transcendence are:
- The ability or quality to use the visual to express the invisible.
- The work should aspire a personal transformation in order to inspire
communal transfiguration.
- A corporeal likeness that is sopra or transmundane in order to show
“unlikeness’
- Its message is neither depleting nor depleted but ongoing and endless.
As Alberti speaks of “istoria” to mean the sum of our observations
and experiences, works that are transcendental take our spiritual memory,
our history, and our spiritual experiences and render them new. We see
beauty and truth as new because it makes us new. The ability or quality
to use the visual to express the invisible precludes all sacred art. As
the Invisible entered Its own creation took on flesh and became visible,
we are called to make the visible in that the faithful may return to the
invisible again. Here is where what speaks of beauty will speak of truth.
If sacred art is to have a moral aesthetic it must a have a visual aesthetic.
In his address to artists on the function of art Pope Pius XII recommends,
“Seek God here below in nature and in man, buy above all within
yourselves. Do not vainly try to give the human without the divine, nor
nature without its Creator. Harmonize instead the infinite with the eternal,
man with God, and thus you will give the truth of art and the true art.”
When we say that a work should aspire a personal transformation its
goal then is make us feel and realize our place in the Mystical Body.
Once this connection to the Mystical Body is accepted by artist and viewer
communal transfiguration is realized. From Francis of Assisi on, figures
painted and sculpted took on their natural fullness, their biological
wonder. Part of this was due to his Canticle to Brother Sun. What St.
Francis did was quite different from the pagan anthropomorphism of the
Greeks or Romans and beyond the simple personification of the elements.
“Brother Sun”, “Sister Moon”, “Brother Fire”,
“Sister Water”, and of course the birds, his “Brother
and Sisters of the Air”, were all part of one creation along with
our Adam and Eve and most importantly, Christ. Never before had personification
in art taken on such impact to include all humankind in one family along
with all else created. By renaming them in familial terms, Francis made
all Creation one family, something the pagan personification of gods and
goddesses could never accomplish something it never could intend. As Catholics
we can experience both the personal and communal transformation. Our “family”
is demonstrated, the invisible community is realized through a visual
means.
To make a corporeal likeness that is transmundane is to show nothing
less than the “Body Electric”, our unlikeness now to our anticipated
Resurrection in Christ. As artists, we have discovered and will remain
discovering the means and metaphors by which this is attained. The image
is a simulacrum and represents the subject’s characteristics and
is not a reproduction. We make a world that resembles ours but is different
from it. Thus our works, our paintings and sculptures become like prayers
and perform much like intercessions between the intelligible world and
the perceptual world. The human figure although a focal point, becomes
a sublime means to a spiritual realm.
If the Poverello of Assisi gave us the inspiration to depict our human
body and the Body of Christ as it was created; again it was Ignatius of
Loyola gave us the courage to flex our muscle. Counter Reformation art
if you thought the flesh of the Quattrocento was bad, watch this! Like
Francis of Assisi, St. Ignatius tells us nothing of art but gives us an
armature in his Spiritual Exercises. He instructs us, “to look at
people with the eyes of imagination, to smell and taste the infinite sweetness
of God, to celebrate ornament and buildings of the Church, to celebrate
images and venerate them for what they represent”. Looking at the
four parts of the Exercises we begin with the contemplation of our sins,
on to the life of Christ, the Passions, and finally the Resurrection and
Ascension. As the exercises begin in the dark, in tenebrum, we begin to
witness secularization of the transcendental in art and vice versa. The
theme of metamorphosis becomes central to Catholic art and architecture.
But more importantly it is the use the mundane, the use of worldly body,
and the senses to reveal the divine: how much is this like the Incarnation
itself!
But before it can be sacred of religious or devotional art, it must
be beautiful and true. Beauty and truth here comprise a reciprocal relationship
in that what speaks of beauty also reveals truth and what reveals beauty
speaks of beauty. Here the visible and invisible validate each other as
what has a visual aesthetic gives way to a moral aesthetic. The irrational
space of the mannerist meets the rational of the high renaissance. The
null space of the eastern icon meets the tenebrist void of Counter Reformation
art.
Can there be faith with out an aesthetic? Can there be faith without
a value? Without an aesthetic, without beauty, the covenant could hardly
exist. As Genesis tells us, God made it and said it was good. God as Maker
as Artist sees his creation and places a value on it. It also tells us
two things: that work is good and working well is good. This value as
is this creation is ongoing. The Master Artist is still at work on his
creation of which we are part. Tommaso Campanella in his “De sensu
verum et magia” of 1604 writes: “The world is the statue,
the image, the living temple of God, in which He has expressed his gestures
and written His concepts; He has adorned it with living statues, simple
in heaven, but complex and weak on earth; but they all lead to Him.”
This idea of Creation as “art”, as God’s own “living
statue”, the earth as his First Daughter, the orb as His favored
shape has always been with us. Now the Imatori Dei is complete. We as
artists imitate God as Artist.
In closing, as presence, witness, and transcendence are realized, this
covenant made in paint, carved in stone or cast in bronze becomes a relationship
of reciprocity between origin and belief, the continuity of that belief,
and the reassurance of that belief in the future. It allows us to project
our faith in time, which is hope. These works of sacred art then take
their place and simply sit side by side with the history of the Church,
with the history of the Faithful. As sacred art looks toward the covenant,
it is the covenant between the artist, the faithful, the Church, and the
Holy Spirit that produces the true soul, the revealed meaning of the work.
By means of this covenant, great sacred art continually reveals something
about us as it continually reveals something about the mysteries of our
faith. Its speaks to us, with us, and for us in our ongoing metamorphosis,
our ongoing sacred conversation.
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