"In My Father's House ... " is an exhibition of twenty-three fine prints relating to the passion, death, and resurrection of Christ, i.e., the "Preludes to Easter." Selected from Georgetown's collections of more than 7200 fine prints, the exhibition is divided into three parts: the first, a presentation in mid-20th century iconography of the fourteen "Stations of the Cross;" the second, a further consideration of the crucifixion itself; and third, the first word of Christ's resurrection.
By way of introduction, the exhibition begins in Case #1 with the following wood engraving by the British printmaker, William E. C. Morgan:
(click each image to enlarge)
Morgan, William E. C. (1903-1979)
The Crucifixion, 1925
wood engraving, 135 x 172 mm.
A student of Henry Tonks at London's Slade School, Morgan won the Prix
de Rome medal in 1924 in wood engraving, and its three-year scholarship
to the British School in Rome. It was there in his first year that he did
this engraving of the crucified Christ dying in a rural landscape in the
Italian hill country. Note that he peopled it with a traveler on horseback
riding off in the distance to a neighboring town, a farmer plowing his
field, with another talking to the print's lone woman while keeping an
eye on his pigs, and a kneeling monk tending to the needs of a man fallen
ill, all going about their normal activities, oblivious to the momentous
drama playing out in their midst-a phenomenon which will turn up again
in the last print in Part II of the exhibition.
I - THE STATIONS OF THE CROSS
according to Dick Swift
Part I opens with Georgetown's set of Dick Swift's fourteen intaglio prints of the Stations of the Cross produced in 1957 and 1958. They are called intaglios because the artist uses several different methods in working up their images on the copper plates from which they were printed, including etching, drypoint, soft ground, aquatint, etc., as needed to obtain their desired tonal and textural results. Note how Swift has retold the timeless story of the Stations as a 20th century drama, replete with the references to the injustices and sufferings of its wars. His fourteen stations are presented in Cases #2 through #15 as follows:
FIRST STATION
The Judgment of Pilate
SECOND
STATION
Christ Is Laden with the Cross
THIRD
STATION
Christ Falls the First Time
FOURTH
STATION
Christ Meets His Mother
FIFTH
STATION
Christ is aided by Simon of Cyrene
SEVENTH
STATION
Christ Falls the Second Time
EIGHTH
STATION
Preaching to the Women of Jerusalem
TENTH
STATION
Christ Is Stripped of His Garments
ELEVENTH
STATION
The Nailing to the Cross
TWELFTH
STATION
The Crucifixion
In viewing these prints note both the action taking place and the intaglio techniques and iconography used in creating them. In No.1, for example, Swift uses a heavy aquatint in the background where Pilate washes his hands to highlight Christ's expression of utter disbelief and chagrin over the spectacle. Note also Swift's recurring use of textiles pressed into the soft grounds applied to his copper plates to produce the visual sense of cloth, of vegetation growing in some of the foregrounds, and in the use of recurring geometric designs in a number of his backgrounds.
Moving on to Swift's iconography, he leaves no doubt as to when or where the unfolding drama of the Stations is taking place. Note the high rise buildings in Nos. 6, 7, and 11; the cut of Mary's dress in No. 4; and Veronica's silk stockings and high heels in No. 6, and again in No. 11.
With the action commencing in No. 2, Swift introduces his first two of several monstrous figures of evil, one on either side of Christ as they thrust the cross into his hands. The double horned figure of inhumanity on the left will reappear again horseback in Nos. 3 and 4; standing with spear in hand in No. 6; holding a whip over the fallen Christ in No. 7; and again on horseback in No. 9 as a cohort raises a whip as Christ falls for the third time. And finally, he appears again in No. 11, hammering the nail through Christ's right hand into the wood of the cross.
In that same No. 11, Swift introduces a new figure-death,
as the uniformed rifle-toting soldier, swastika patch on shoulder, driving
the nail through Christ's feet into the cross. In No. 12, still more figures
appear-three prisoners behind a barbed wire enclosure on the left, and
in the lower right, Picasso's bull is arriving by tank from Guernica to
revel in the spectacle of the crucifixion.
II - THE CRUCIFIXION
according to
George Bellows, Robert F. McGovern, and Isac Friedlander
Part II features George Bellows' 1923 lithograph,
"Crucifixion of Christ." It is based on a drawing he did for the publication
of Arthur Conan Doyle's piece, "I Saw Him Crucified," in the September,
1922, issue of Hearst's International Magazine. It was a letter purportedly
written by a Roman soldier to his uncle reporting on the facts of Christ's
crucifixion as he had heard them from a centurion who was there.
Bellows, George Wesley (1883-1925)
Crucifixion of Christ, 1923
lithograph, 476 x 524 mm.
Surrounding the Bellows print are the following three
woodcuts by Robert F. McGovern who teaches at The Philadelphia College
of Art, and who is noted for the quality of his expressive woodcuts. The
first two are on the right, and the third is on the left. Note their spiritual
intensity.
McGovern, Robert F. (b. 1933)
(Denial of Peter), 1984
woodcut, 280 x 181 mm.
McGovern, Robert F. (b. 1933)
And They Mocked Him, 1984
270 x 185 mm.
McGovern, Robert F. (b. 1933)
Truly This Man Was the Son of God, 1985
woodcut, 257 x 184 mm.
Part II ends with Isac Friedlander's remarkable wood
engraving of 1930 entitled "Crucifixion," done not long after his arrival
in New York. Friedlander was an immigrant artist from Latvia, and cousin
of Joseph Hirshhorn's. In this print we find the dying Christ crucified
on the arms of a builder's construction crane overlooking New York's business
district with an elevated train pulling into its station, the nearby river
docks and a passing ship, the neighboring buildings with their billboards,
and the streets below filled with passing cars, busses, and pedestrians
rushing by, oblivious to the drama playing out high above them, not unlike
the people Morgan observed and placed in that Italian hill country print
seen in the introduction to this exhibit.
Friedlander, Isac (1890-1968)
Crucifixion (over New York City), 1930
wood engraving, 304 x 192 mm.
III - THE RESURRECTION
according to Lucas Vorsterman, after Rubens
with some reflections by Irving Amen
The exhibition reaches its peak here in a print by
Lucas Vorsterman, a student of Rubens', and arguably the finest engraver
of his master's paintings. Born in 1595, he took up engraving at age twelve,
and joined Rubens' studio in 1617. Under Rubens' guidance, he developed
an unequaled ability in capturing the expressiveness and nobility of Rubens'
figures. Here is his print, "Holy Women at the Empty Tomb," which he completed
around 1620, dedicating it to two of Antwerp's important matrons.
Vorsterman, Lucas (1595-1642)
Holy Women at the Empty Tomb, c. 1620
engraving, 354 x 455 mm., after Rubens
The scene is taken from the 28th Chapter of St. Matthew's Gospel with "Mary Magdelene and the other Mary" having come to inspect Christ's tomb "as the first day of the week was dawning." They were met by the angel who had already rolled back the stone. Noticing their expressions and those of the other women who accompanied them, Vorsterman's angel attempted to reassure them with the following words seen flowing in Latin from his lips:
"Do not be afraid. I know that you are looking for Jesus, the crucified. He is not here. He has risen exactly as he promised. Come see where he was laid."It was then that the holy women realized that Easter had dawned, and the angel charged them to go quickly and tell the disciples that he would see them in Galilee.
The exhibition comes to a close with the following
two color woodcuts by Irving Amen:
Amen, Irving (b. 1918)
In My Father's House There Are Many Mansions
color woodcut, 407 x 533 mm.
Amen, Irving (b. 1918)
Many Children Dwell in My Father's House
color woodcut, 407 x 533 mm.
As the lead title of the exhibition implied, and as the selection of
its twenty-three prints attempts to show, Christ's passion, death, and
resurrection is a timeless and recurring drama taking place in our midst.
May its "Preludes to Easter" encourage us to reflect on the fulness of
its meaning as it continues to play out in my Father's House of cultural
and religious pluralities where Irving Amen reminds us that His many children
dwell.
Copyright 1999 Georgetown University Library
Design by Jon K. Reynolds