Mary Magdalene (Stevens) Explained

Mary Magdalene
Artist:Alfred Stevens
Year:1887
Medium:Oil on canvas
Height Metric:111.8
Width Metric:77.3
Height Imperial:44
Width Imperial:30.4
Metric Unit:cm
Imperial Unit:in
City:Ghent
Museum:Museum of Fine Arts

Mary Magdalene is an oil on canvas painting by Belgian painter Alfred Stevens. It is Stevens' revision of the Biblical figure of Mary Magdalene. The painting depicts Mary in the form of Sarah Bernhardt, an actres who often posed for portraits by Stevens. The work has been in the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts in Ghent since 2001.

The painting was ordered by the Parisian merchant Georges Petit.

Painting

Alfred Stevens, painter of the mundane life in Paris, met the actress Sarah Bernhardt around 1887. He made several portraits of her. In some of them she posed as a character from history or literature. In this painting we see Bernhardt as Mary Magdalene, the gospel courtesan who later converted and retired as a recluse.[1] [2]

The long hair, the skull - the vanitas symbol par excellence - and the desolate landscape in the background are part of an iconographic tradition that goes back to the Middle Ages. Typical of the nineteenth century is the manifest sensuality and the melancholic, almost hallucinatory gaze wherewith Mary Magdalene looks at the viewer. This blurs the religious context of the character.

The challenging character of the work, yet completely in keeping with the figure of Mary Magdalene, shocked the general public who preferred to see her portrayed as the repentant penitent.[2] [1]

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Alfred Stevens Mary Magdalene . . 20 August 2020.
  2. Web site: Mary Magdalene . . 20 August 2020.