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Raphael (Italian), La belle jardinière (also, Madonna and Child with Saint John the Baptist), 1507

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    We're in the Louvre and we're looking at a painting by Raphael called
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    La Belle Jardiniere, and its a lovely Raphael Madonna, and child
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    with the infant Saint John the Baptist in that pyramid
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    composition that we often associate with the high Renascence
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    What's interesting is the virgin Mary is not in a religious enviroment
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    we see no archway, and she's got no throne
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    if we argue if she had a throne at all it would be
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    the throne of nature. She sits on a rock in a field with
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    a beautiful atmoshphere and persecptive behind her creating this
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    lovely verdant enviroment. As we look down
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    at the foreground we see plants and perhaps the edge of
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    a pond, and little flowers, the loveliest passages to me are
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    the way that Christ on the left, stands on his mother's
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    foot, really showing that kind of dependence on his mother
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    and yet also a growing sense of independence as he seeks to take the book
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    out of her hands, and looks up at her.
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    And of course, the content of that the book foretells his own demise
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    and it foretells the crucifiction. And the look on Mary's face is one that suggests
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    that she knows this, she's looking at him in a sense gaged wheter or not
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    he's ready for that knowledge. She puts her right arm around him protecting him
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    and, seems to hesitate for a moment with her left hand
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    whether to allow him to take that book, or not.
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    Same with John the Baptist who kneels in prayer towards Christ
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    is on-- a very graceful pose,he kneels down on his right knee
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    tilts his neck up, and looks up at Christ. We have that high Renascence gracefulness
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    and ideal beuaty. Let's look for just a moment at
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    the gazes in the painting. I think you're right to start with John the Baptist,
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    and his eyes gazing up at Christ, who in turns body and face moves up to Mary
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    Mary then returns that gaze and sends our gaze back down
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    to Christ. So, everyone's gaze is really focused on Christ
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    And now we're sorta in the middle of that triangle
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    as we watch them look at each other. And Mary is ideally
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    beautiful and we have only the faintest outline of a halo
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    that halo is disappearing as we enter the high Renascence, because
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    the figures exude a kind of divinity by their ideal beauty.
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    We don't need that symbol of a halo anymore. And for Raphael, its nature that
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    takes on that role, no longer that stage props of divinity necessary as you said,
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    but its the landscape itself, its god's world, that he has created
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    that is in an expression of divinity, and its beauty itself that is the expression
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    of divinity here. Mary's beauty, Christ's beauty, and even John's beauty.
Title:
Raphael (Italian), La belle jardinière (also, Madonna and Child with Saint John the Baptist), 1507
Description:

Raphael (Italian), La belle jardinière (also, Madonna and Child with Saint John the Baptist), 1507, oil on panel, 48 × 31½ in (122 × 80 cm, Musée du Louvre, Paris)

Speakers: Drs. Beth Harris and Steven Zucker

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
02:56
IveGotSuperHearing-1D added a translation

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