Roettgen Pieta
In or around the year 1325, an unknown German artist sculpted a dramatic scene central to the story of Christ: the moment at which Mary laments the death of her only son. This poignant moment is known as "the pity," or pieta. The pieta scene was popularized toward the end of the thirteenth century, making the Roettgen pieta one of the earliest and most historically significant representations this particular moment of passion. The scene is one that would become pervasive in Christian art and iconography, and studies of pieta sculptures can serve as proxy studies of the evolution of Western art, and Christian-themed Western art in particular. At the time the Roettgen pieta was created, pieces like these were known in German as Andachtsbild, or images used for contemplation[footnoteRef:1]. These images were especially common in Germany during the late medieval and Romanesque periods.[footnoteRef:2] Moreover, "as affective meditations increased in popularity between the 13th and 16th centuries, the popularity of the pieta (pity) as a subject of painting and sculpture unsurprisingly increased as well."[footnoteRef:3] The pieta was "a dominant theme that captured the imagination of the church in the middle ages."[footnoteRef:4] One of the reasons the pieta became a dominant theme at this particular historical moment was the shift in perspective from a hierarchical view of spirituality towards one that was more personal and therefore more emotional in nature.[footnoteRef:5] "The major shift was to a personal piety enriched by empathetic responses to the mother of Jesus holding a mutilated dead son across her lap.[footnoteRef:6] The Roettgen pieta embodies this shift in Western art and Christianity. [1: Horst Woldemor Janson and Anthony F. Janson. History of Art: The Western Tradition. Prentice Hall Professional, 2004, p. 174.] [2: Janson and Janson. History of Art.] [3: Christia Mercer. "Knowledge and Suffering in Early Modern Philosophy: G.W. Liebniz and Anne Conway," p. 3] [4: John W. Cook. "What is Christian about Christian Art?" In Interpreting Christian Art: Reflections on Christian Art, Ed. Hornik, Heidi J. And Parsons, Mikeal Carl. Macon: Mercer University Press, 2004, p. 193] [5: John W. Cook. "What is Christian about Christian Art?"] [6: John W. Cook. "What is Christian about Christian Art?" p. 193.]
The wooden sculpture stands 34-1/2" high, or 87.5 centimeters. At nearly three feet high, the figure would have been ideal for placement in a small side altar or side chapel in a larger church.[footnoteRef:7] Of the wooden pieta altarpieces that are technically classified as Andachtsbilder, the Roettgen pieta is "considered the most graphic and grotesque."[footnoteRef:8] Indeed, art historians have referred to the Roettgen pieta in no uncertain terms as "gruesome stuff."[footnoteRef:9] [7: James Luther Adams, Wilson Yates and Robert Penn Warren. The Grotesque in Art and Literature: Theological Reflections. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 1997. ] [8: James Luther Adams, Wilson Yates and Robert Penn Warren. The Grotesque in Art and Literature, p. 132.] [9: Christia Mercer. "Knowledge and Suffering in Early Modern Philosophy: G.W. Liebniz and Anne Conway," p. 1]
The artist opted for vivid hues when painting the pieta, likely to evoke in the viewer a strong emotional reaction that corresponded with intense suffering related to contemplation of death. The viewer of the pieta is not just contemplating death as an existential issue but specifically the death of Christ, who sacrifices his life to promote the salvation of humanity. Vivid colors aid the viewer to respond to the image with "emotional fervor," as if the gruesomeness of the scene itself might be insufficient.[footnoteRef:10] Furthermore, the artist opted for a highly realistic rendition of the pieta rather than incorporate symbols. The artist conveys death in its totality, in the ways death affects the dying and the living as well. [10: Horst Woldemor Janson and Anthony F. Janson. History of Art: The Western Tradition. Prentice Hall Professional, 2004, p. 175]
Christ's physical, emotional, and mental anguish are paralleled in the reaction of his mother to her deep and unfathomable loss. The viewer, steeped in Christian allegory, theology, and mysticism, can then contemplate the global meanings embedded in the pieta such as the sacrifice of Christ. "The purpose of the work clearly is to arouse so overwhelming a sense of horror and pity that the faithful will share in Christ's suffering and identify with the grief-stricken Mother of God."[footnoteRef:11] The viewer is encouraged to identify and empathize more with the Mother of God than with the Son, and this fact is evident in the artist's composition. The artist renders Mary larger than Christ, who is emaciated,...
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