Selections from the Nasher Museum of Art
A Garland of Flowers Surrounding a Mocking of Christ
 |
A Garland of Flowers
Surrounding a Mocking of Christ
ca. 1643
by Simon de Vos and Daniel Seghers
oil on canvas, 51.5 x 42 inches.
Given in honor of Marilyn M. Segal by her children. |
The center of this painting depicts
a scene from the Passion of Christ, the series of events
leading to His crucifixion. After Jesus is sentenced to death
by Pontius Pilate, Roman soldiers mock him and crown him
with thorns. This central motif was painted by Simon de Vos
(1603-1676).
Each of the magnificently rendered flowers has thorns or
prickles--a direct symbolic relationship to the subject.
Not only are the flowers rendered with botanical accuracy
but also with tremendous sensitivity to their individual
nature. Each bloom stretches toward the light, its tendrils
curling outside the geometry of the garland swag. They are
the most tender ex votos--ever fresh, the purest symbols
of fervent prayer. From the late 1630s through the mid-1640s,
Daniel Seghers (1590-1661) executed twenty flower garland
paintings for the Church of St. Charles Borromeo in Antwerp,
Flanders, Belgium. This painting presumably was part of that
commission.
|