Friday, October 28, 2016
Saint Francis of Assisi and the Stigmata
In the painting, enshrine Francis of Assisi Receiving the Stigmata, by operative Jan Van Eyck, we see a scene which takes place on a rocky hillside ascendent a village. The scene shows Saint Francis receiving his stigmata, which ar actual wounds seem on the hands and feet of the idiosyncratic receiving the anomaly. These wounds ar app argonntly ruminative of those which Christ endured throughout the crucifixion process.\nIn the painting, standing a barelyting to Saint Francis is a slice whom many believe to be Brother Leo; cognise to be with Saint Francis when he had a vision of the nonesuch nailed to a cross, followed by the appearing of the mysterious stigmata. The painting is lots smaller than I expected. I knew that it was small, from class discussions, scarcely eyesight middling how tiny it is, and how flimsy the detail is, is breathtaking. Saint Francis is kneeling, arrange in a chocolate-brown cloak that covers all of his organic structure except for his h ead, hands and feet. look closer at the number, his dust looks as though its contorted, but Im assuming thats purposeful so that the bottoms of his feet are visible. The angel is just to the right of Saint Francis head. He has six wings that are vibrant blues, creams and reds. Two of them are held above his head, two are extended outwards at his sides, and two are cover song the bottom half of his body. The angel is nailed to a cross. The angels head is hung, but his eyes are forthwith lined up with the stigmata on Saint Francis hands. The three manpower are on a grassy hillside, with many plants and rocks skirt them. The scene is painted in great detail, right conquer to the small boat profuse of people and the view of the township in the distance. Even the ferns on the surrounding foliage are almost obsessively realistic. Although the anatomy of the figures is slightly bump off, to show off the bottoms of Saint Francis feet, the painting is very detailed and looks, at firstborn glance, incredibly real.\nSaint Francis of Assisi and...
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