Christ Presented to the People (Ecce Homo) | |
Artist: | Antonio da Correggio |
Medium: | Oil on poplar |
Subject: | Jesus, Pontius Pilate, Mary, possibly Mary Magdalene |
Height Metric: | 99 |
Width Metric: | 80 |
Metric Unit: | cm |
Imperial Unit: | in |
Museum: | National Gallery |
City: | London |
Accession: | NG15 |
Ecce Homo, also known as Christ Presented to the People, is an oil painting by Antonio da Correggio. It is the last of the surviving pictures of the Passion of Jesus that Correggio executed during the 1520s. The painting is in the National Gallery, London.[1]
According to the Gospels of Luke and John, the enemies of Jesus had to deal with their prisoner according to the formality of the Roman law. They brought him to the Roman governor, Pontius Pilate, accusing him of "perverting the nation, and forbidding to give tribute to Caesar, saying that he himself is Christ, a king."[2] The governor duly examined Jesus, but, finding no case against him, proposed to scourge him and let him go.[3]
Pilate again sought to release Jesus, but the people continued to clamour, "Away with him," "Crucify him." "Then delivered he him therefore unto them to be crucified."[4] [5]
The Latin form of Pilate's words, "Behold the man", has given the title Ecce Homo to this picture. It is the moment when Jesus comes forth from the rude mockery of the soldiers, clad in a royal robe, and wearing the crown of thorns. The governor has bidden one of the soldiers lead the prisoner out on a balcony of the palace. An eager throng of people are waiting outside, but they are not all enemies. Among them are a few faithful women, and they are allowed to press close to the balcony. At the sight of her son, treated as a criminal with bound hands, the mother, Mary, falls swooning over the balustrade, supported by a younger woman.
Pilate standing in the doorway behind appeals to the crowd: "I find no fault in him. Behold the man." He has been deeply impressed by his interview with Jesus, and is willing to do something in his behalf. According to Estelle May Hurll, "His face is good-natured, we see, but with no strength of character in it. He is a handsome man with curling beard carefully trimmed, apparently not a hard man to deal with, but easy-going and selfish."
Jesus stands with drooping head and an expression of suffering resignation. In the menacing faces before him he sees the hatred which will be satisfied with nothing less than his death. The rich mantle, which the soldiers have mockingly thrown over his shoulders, falls away and shows the body as it had been bared for the scourging. Hurll writes, "It is a beautiful form, perfectly developed, and the arms and hands are as delicately modelled as a woman's."[6] The face is oval, with regular features of classic mould, a short parted beard, and long hair falling in disordered curls about it. This is the typical face of Christ in Western Christian art.
The mother Mary is still young and beautiful. A heavy veil or mantle is draped over her head, framing the pure profile of her face. This form of drapery is common among the old masters in painting Mary as Mater Dolorosa, or the Sorrowing Mother.[7] Hurll writes, "Artistically considered, this figure of the fainting mother is the finest thing in the picture. Her companion, probably Mary Magdalene, is also a lovely creature, though we see only a part of her face."[8]
Like the picture of The Marriage of St. Catherine, this painting shows how skilfully Correggio painted hands. Hurll observes, "The drooping fingers of the Saviour taper delicately, with long almond-shaped nails. Pilate's hand has slender, flexible fingers like those of some dainty woman, and might be mated with that of Mary Magdalene. It is apparent that the study of hands and feet interested [Correggio] more than that of faces. … [T]he face of Christ must be less attractive, on account of the sorrowful expression. To make up, as it were, for this, the hands are brought into prominent notice, and are very beautiful."
It is generally believed that the original Ecce Homo, of which there are several old copies, is the picture now in the National Gallery of London.[9] The picture belonged successively to the Conte Prati of Parma, the Colonna family at Rome, Sir Simon Clarke, Murat, and the Marquis of Londonderry.[10] [11] It was bought by the National Gallery in 1834, and has the inventory number NG15.
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