Giorgione's "Adoration of the Shepherds", often called the "Allendale Adoration", is one of the most popular paintings in Washington's National Gallery. At this time of year it is a Christmas card perennial. It was also used in one of the most popular US stamp issues.
The scene is so familiar that it is easy to overlook its layers of meaning. Even a modern observer can see that this newborn King is not protected by armed guards. There is no need to bribe or otherwise court influence with bureaucrats acting as intermediaries. Anyone, even the simplest and the humblest, can approach this King directly and in his or her own fashion.
"In 1971, an incredible 1.2 billion copies of a single postage stamp were printed by the U.S. Postal Service. It was the largest stamp printing order in the world since postage stamps were first introduced in 1840. It was almost ten times larger that the usual printing of an American commemorative stamp. The stamp was one of two Christmas stamps issued that year. It depicted a Nativity scene by the Italian painter Giorgione, Adoration of the Shepherds, and portrayed Mary, Joseph, the Christ Child, and two shepherds." (M.W. Martin: “Christmas in Stamps,” in Catholic Digest Christmas Book, ed. Father Kenneth Ryan, St. Paul, Minnesota, 1977.)
The scene is so familiar that it is easy to overlook its layers of meaning. Even a modern observer can see that this newborn King is not protected by armed guards. There is no need to bribe or otherwise court influence with bureaucrats acting as intermediaries. Anyone, even the simplest and the humblest, can approach this King directly and in his or her own fashion.
For those interested in a discussion of the painting, I reproduce an earlier post below. I include some introductory material on Giorgione. Merry Christmas.
Giorgione is the most mysterious and perhaps
the greatest of all Venetian Renaissance artists. Mysterious not only because
so little is known about his short life, but also because no other great
painter’s work has led to so many questions of attribution and interpretation.
Giorgione was a “nickname” and contemporary
documents refer to the painter as Zorzo da Castelfranco. Castelfranco is a
walled town west of Treviso. about an hour away from Venice via modern commuter
rail. We do not know how or when the young Giorgione arrived in Venice. In
those days it is likely that he traveled down the Brenta to Padua and then on
to Venice by canal. We do know that by the time of his death in 1510 at about
the age of 33, he had become the favorite painter of the Venetian aristocracy.
The subject of the "Allendale adoration" is a
depiction of the adoration of the shepherds who have left their flocks to seek
out the newborn Savior after hearing the angel’s announcement.
Now when the angels had gone from them into heaven, the shepherds said to one another, “let us go to Bethlehem and see this thing that has happened which the Lord has made know to us..” So they hurried away and found Mary and Joseph, and the baby lying in a manger.
Luke’s account of the angelic appearance to the shepherds is
the traditional gospel at the midnight Mass on Christmas . The actual arrival
of the shepherds at the stable in Bethlehem is the passage used for the gospel
reading for the Christmas Mass at dawn.
The relatively small size of the painting indicates that it
was done not as an altarpiece but for private devotion. Although the subject is
clear, there is a deeper meaning.* Why is the infant Jesus lying on the rocky
ground and not in a manger or feeding trough? Why is he naked? Where are the
swaddling clothes?
Actually the newborn infant is lying on a white cloth that
just happens to be on the ends of Mary’s elaborate blue robe that the artist
has taken great pains to spread over the rocky ground. Giorgione is here using
a theme employed earlier by Giovanni Bellini and later by Titian in their
famous Frari altarpieces. The naked Christ is the Eucharist that lies on the
stone altar at every Mass. The altar is covered with a white cloth that in Rona
Goffen’s words “recalls the winding cloth, ritualized as the corporale, the cloth spread on the altar
to receive the Host of the Mass.” In Franciscan spirituality Mary is regarded
as the altar.
Clearly, the viewer-worshipper is meant to identify the Madonna with the altar and the Child with the Eucharist. Bellini's visual assertion of this symbolic equivalence is explained by a common Marian epithet. The Madonna is the "Altar of Heaven." the Ara Coeli, that contains the eucharistic body of Christ” Ave verum Corpus, natum de Maria Virgine.**
The “Adoration of the Shepherds” represents the first Mass.
This is not such an unusual concept. Many years ago I attended a talk on the
famous Portinari altarpiece that now hangs in the Uffizi. The speaker was Fr.
Maurice McNamee, a Jesuit scholar, who argued that Hugo van der Goes had also
illustrated a Mass in that Netherlandish altarpiece around the year 1475. His
argument centered on the spectacular garments of the kneeling angels that he
identified as altar servers wearing vestments of the time. He called them
“vested angels,” and they are the subject of his 1998 study, “Vested Angels,
Eucharistic Allusions in Early Netherlandish Painting.”
His Eucharistic interpretation explained the naked infant on
the hard, rocky ground. The infant Christ is the same as the sacrificial Christ
on the Cross. In a study of Mary in Botticelli’s art Alessandra Galizzi Kroegel
referred to this connection.
it needs to be pointed out first of all that the Renaissance era saw the spread of practices of individual devotion to be carried out primarily in the home…From the theological perspective attention should then be drawn to the emergence of a new trend that…tended to identify the mystery of the Incarnation with the Redemption itself, focusing on the Passion with much less fervour than in the past: whence the growing popularity of ‘incarnational’ iconographies celebrating the word made flesh, such as pictures of the Infant Jesus in his mother’s arms…while the demand for images with Christ on the Cross, very common in the fourteenth century was drastically reduced.***
It would appear that Giorgione has used the same motif
although his angels have become little putti who hover around the scene. The
shepherds represent participants in the Mass who kneel in adoration.
There are many other iconographical details in this painting
that could be discussed. Joseph’s gold robe indicates royal descent from the
House of David. The ox and ass in the cave are symbols of the old order that
has been renewed with the coming of Christ. So too would be the tree trunk next
to the flourishing laurel bush in the left foreground. The laurel is a
traditional symbol of joy, triumph, and resurrection.
Finally, it has been noticed that Giorgione has moved the
main characters off to the right away from their traditional place in the
center. Rather than diminishing their importance this narrative device serves
to make all the action flow from left to right and culminate in the Holy
Family. Giovanni Bellini had done
the same thing in his “St. Francis in the Desert,” and later Titian would use
this device in his Pesaro altarpiece in the Frari.
###
*Two recent catalogs have offered interpretations. See Mario
Lucco’s entry in Brown, David Alan, and Ferino-Pagden, Sylvia, Bellini,
Giorgione, Titian, and the Renaissance of Venetian Painting,
Washington, 2006. Also see the very strange interpretation of Wolfgang Eller in
Giorgione
Catalog Raisonne, Petersberg, 2007.
**Rona Goffen, Piety
and Patronage in Renaissance Venice,
Yale, 1986. P. 53.
***Alessandra Galizzi Kroegel, “The Figure of Mary in
Botticelli’s Art.” Botticelli: from Lorenzo the Magnificent to Savonarola,
2003. (ex. cat), p. 56.