Art Lovers discussion
Paintings of the Same Subject
>
The Pieta
date
newest »

message 1:
by
Heather
(last edited Mar 08, 2018 12:16PM)
(new)
Mar 08, 2018 12:15PM

reply
|
flag

I don't like the color scheme of the van Goth, and I don't like Mary's face, but I do like the sort of indifferent serenity on Christ's face.
In the Delacroix I like the white across Christ's legs, but I don't like Mary's face and her color scheme. I like the seeming peacefulness in Christ face, and I also like the mix of blotchy colors on his torso.
I like El Greco's Mary the best. But the look on her face, what might she be thinking? I do think the pyramidal construction is a bit too obvious. It took me awhile to discern the figure to Christ's right (viewers right), at first I had only a disembodied arm on Mary's left shoulder (from Mary's perspective). The dark circle around Christ's eye, actually the whole of Christ done in the pale black and white looks like death.
Very interesting study. - )

The look of grief on Mary's face is beautifully done.
Any thoughts on why Van Gogh flipped Delacroix's composition?

It seems it only matters if you have a few others to look at to realize the flip! But now that I'm looking the El Greco is slightly different in the sense that Mary's head is going one way and Christ's is going the other, crossed, while in the others they M&C tilt the same way.


I think he did it to be different. So people would notice. It's different.


1626
Museo del Prado"
The woman's (Mary?) face is very evocative here. She's looking to the heavens, but what is her expression suppose to convey?

1516
Palazzo Pitti, Florence, Italy"
I like this one; especially the woman clasping, so lovingly it seems, Christ's legs.

1626
Museo del Prado"
The woman's (Mary?) face is very evocative here. She's looking to the heavens, but what is her expression suppose to convey?"
That's a good question. In my opinion, or what I think at first glance, is she has been not only his mother, but a devout follower and believer that He is the Christ and is now looking to heaven to ask "Why?" Maybe her belief is shaken? Or just confused.

1626
Museo del Prado"
The woman's (Mary?) face is very evocative here. She's looking to the heavens, but what is her expression suppose to convey?"
Tha..."
Thank you, Heather. I was sort of afraid to say it, but it seems rather obvious that the artist intended for us, the way her face is framed in darkness, to wonder what her thoughts, conveyed, or exposed by her expression might possibly be. So, Yes! That is exactly what I see too! Why?
(I do have a more cynical side where she might be thinking, "Satisfied?")