Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Death is Swallowed Up in Victory: Scenes of Death in Early Christian Art and the Emergence of Crucifixion Iconography

View through CrossRef
Christianity, and the instrument of Jesus’ death, the cross, remains the pivotal, and universally recognised, symbol of the Christian Church. Yet pictorial representations of the death of Jesus are conspicuously rare in the earliest Christian art. Moreover, the earliest surviving images  of Jesus’ Crucifixion do not depict  him dead on the cross, but defiantly alive – a visual interpretation of the event that incorporates both the means of his execution and his subsequent victory over death in the Resurrection. This article examines the iconography of a small ivory plaque, carved in Rome in the early fifth century, whereon the Crucifixion is juxtaposed with the suicide of Jesus’ betrayer, Judas Iscariot (Matthew 27 3:5) to effect a powerful visual interpretation of Jesus’ death. As the earliest surviving visual narration of Jesus’ Crucifixion and Resurrection, the ivory will be shown to preserve critical information regarding the interpretation of Christ’s death in the early Christian church - incorporating symbols and visual motifs from pagan funerary sculpture, while illustrating the development of a specifically Christian visual language for the representation of Jesus’ death.
University of Technology, Sydney (UTS)
Title: Death is Swallowed Up in Victory: Scenes of Death in Early Christian Art and the Emergence of Crucifixion Iconography
Description:
Christianity, and the instrument of Jesus’ death, the cross, remains the pivotal, and universally recognised, symbol of the Christian Church.
Yet pictorial representations of the death of Jesus are conspicuously rare in the earliest Christian art.
Moreover, the earliest surviving images  of Jesus’ Crucifixion do not depict  him dead on the cross, but defiantly alive – a visual interpretation of the event that incorporates both the means of his execution and his subsequent victory over death in the Resurrection.
This article examines the iconography of a small ivory plaque, carved in Rome in the early fifth century, whereon the Crucifixion is juxtaposed with the suicide of Jesus’ betrayer, Judas Iscariot (Matthew 27 3:5) to effect a powerful visual interpretation of Jesus’ death.
As the earliest surviving visual narration of Jesus’ Crucifixion and Resurrection, the ivory will be shown to preserve critical information regarding the interpretation of Christ’s death in the early Christian church - incorporating symbols and visual motifs from pagan funerary sculpture, while illustrating the development of a specifically Christian visual language for the representation of Jesus’ death.

Related Results

Crucifixion
Crucifixion
Crucifixion and related bodily suspension penalties were widely employed in Antiquity for the punishment of criminals and in times of war. Jesus of Nazareth is the most famous vict...
Quantifying corn emergence using UAV imagery and machine learning
Quantifying corn emergence using UAV imagery and machine learning
Corn (Zea mays L.) is one of the important crops in the United States for animal feed, ethanol production, and human consumption. To maximize the final corn yield, one of the criti...
Human Figures
Human Figures
Many reverses of the Intermediate and Secondary phases have human figures either singly or in pairs, sitting or standing, and with a variety of attributes. Among the many figures r...
Animal Iconography
Animal Iconography
Pagan Germanic art had favoured the representation of animals and invested it with apotropaic qualities. The new Christian animal iconography (Evangelists’ symbols, doves, peacock,...
Jewish Crucifixions, Christian Tragedy: The White Crucifixion as a Site for Tragic Theology after the Holocaust
Jewish Crucifixions, Christian Tragedy: The White Crucifixion as a Site for Tragic Theology after the Holocaust
Abstract In 2013, Pope Francis, to the surprise of many, singled out Marc Chagall’s 1938 painting the White Crucifixion as one of his favorites. However, despite being a depiction ...
Death, humor, and honesty: Storytelling strategies in caitlin doughty’s work
Death, humor, and honesty: Storytelling strategies in caitlin doughty’s work
Section 1. Staging Death: The Power of Scenes 1. Scene-by-scene construction In The Art of Fact, Lounsberry lists creative nonfiction features, and the scene is one of them. “Inste...
Peran Psikologi dalam Pendidikan Kristen di Sekolah Kristen
Peran Psikologi dalam Pendidikan Kristen di Sekolah Kristen
Christian education is a teaching and learning process that is based on the Bible, is moved by the Holy Spirit, and is Christocentric. One of the formal Christian education is mani...

Back to Top