This article first appeared at The
Christian Manifesto.
In
1864, the French painter Edouard
Manet finished “The Dead Christ
with Angels,” which he then sent to that year’s Salon for exhibition. It is
a picture of the dead Christ with two angels in the tomb, based (rather
loosely) on Mary Magdalene’s sighting of the angels after Jesus’ death. (In the
Biblical account, Mary Magdalene only sees the angels, not the body of Christ.)
After
it was on its way, the painter realized he had made an error – he painted
Christ’s wound from the soldier’s spear on the side of the body, instead of the
right. Manet wrote to his friend, the writer Charles Baudelaire, asking
advice on what to do. Baudelaire advised him to fix it before the Salon opened,
or face ridicule. Manet did not repaint the wound, and he was indeed ridiculed.
It
is a moving painting, and oddly more modern-looking than 1864 might suggest. It
is one of several religious-themed works that Manet did about that time, and at
first glance it seems quite orthodox, aside from the placement of the wound.
But
look more closely, and something else becomes apparent. The story of the
exchange with Baudelaire notwithstanding, something else is going on this
painting, and it suggests a kind of warning for Christians about both “serious”
and popular culture.
Look
in painting’s the lower right-hand corner, and you will see a snake slithering
through rocks. What’s brought to mind is Genesis 3:15, where God tells Adam and
Eve about the one to come, who will be bruised on his heel but will bruise the
serpent on its head – the passage that is considered the first reference to the
promise of the messiah. The snake in Manet’s painting is anything but dead or
injured, while Christ is clearly dead (although you can see the halo above his
head).
Step
back and look at the painting as a whole, and you see the angels attending to
the body of the dead Christ and the healthy snake slithering away. The angel on
the left does appear sad; the angel attending directly to the dead Christ looks
– what? Impassive? They don’t seem ready to announce that He is risen as much
as that He’s dead, and they’re there to take him to heaven.
The
story can go in one of two directions. Either it is right before Christ is
resurrected and the angels’ announcement of that, or it is a new narrative, in
which Christ is just another saint, and His soul is being escorted to heaven.
The snake’s situation is equally ambiguous – it’s either right before the
bruising of its head or there will be no bruising at all, and the serpent is
perhaps just a serpent after all.
Manet
himself inscribed the painting with the Bible verse reference – John 20:12:
Mary is standing outside the tomb and bends over to look inside “and saw two
angels in white, seated where Jesus’ body had been, one at the head and the
other at the foot.” The two angels in the painting are in shades of brown, not
white; they are not at the head and the foot but on either side. Whatever one
wants to say about the painting, it is not a literal rendering of the verse
Manet based it on.
The
painting, and the stories it may be telling, serve as a reminder for us about
culture. It’s not that we should always, always be literal in how we
participate in culture. It is more that we be careful, and not leave what we’re
doing so open to two very different (and opposite) interpretations. Manet
painted either a religious painting loosely based on scripture, or he painted
what looks like an anti-Christian one.
Painting: The Dead Christ with Angels,
oil on canvas by Edouard Manet (1864), Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
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