Many artists for years, including the Master Leonardo da Vinci, imagined this critical moment in the New Testament, as the Arch Angel Gabriel (The messenger of God) announces to the young Mary (no more than a young teenager) that she is pregnant. His name is Jesus - He is the Son of God, and God has chosen her to carry him, give birth, and care for Him throughout His younger years.
For example, in some interpretations, the painting by the
Pre-Raphaelite, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, depicts the virgin almost in
fear and the angel Gabriel, overwhelming, perhaps intimidating. But on the other hand, Da
Vinci’s painting, which only painted the wings of
Gabriel as he was only an apprentice at the time, does not capture
the power and grace of this critical and significant event.
In
this interpretation, Waterhouse depicts the Messenger Gabriel
offering flowers, subtle, sensitive, and ensuring he does not frighten
the young woman.
Mary
is painting, writing, or weaving and, upon seeing the
Angel Gabriel, puts her left hand to her heart, and her right hand
above her head (Halos rings above their heads) have been added. (Did
Waterhouse paint them? - indeed, not his style.) showing she is
undoubtedly experiencing a Visitation: still, there is that expression
of shock. The angel Gabriel tells her how and what to do and to find
the good man, Joseph, who, on that very night, has a big dream and is
told what he must do…
To
be sure, two significant events define Christianity:
the above painting of the Immaculate Conception & Jesus Christ’s
Rising from the dead after his terrible crucifixion. Faith in these
events and the Love of God continue to resonate and can be found in
words, sermons, and in this case, a beautiful painting by a gifted
artist.
This
painting was completed in 1914, only two years before the artist’s
death.
Of
all the interpretations of this significant moment in the New
Testament, Warehouses’ rendition feels to be the most real, at least from my point of view.
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