欧洲古典肖像画中作为教师的基督

Z. Lurie
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引用次数: 0

摘要

文章探讨了欧洲视觉传统中基督教诲主题的视觉体现。作者指出,在《新约圣经》文本和最早的基督教作家作品中生动体现的教师和教育者的教学隐喻,通过某些图像形式在美术中得到了反映。我们假定好牧人的象征性形象可能具有教育学意义(以亚历山大的克莱门特为基础)。此外,还分析了 4-5 世纪作品中教师形象的变化:这些作品中的 "奇工基督 "和 "哲学家基督 "具有不同的肖像原型。无论基督肖像诠释的特点如何,其特殊属性(修辞姿态、手杖、卷轴或打开的手抄本)都能让人将其认定为教师。基督是教师、公义和神圣智慧,与世俗知识不可同日而语,这种观点是教父传统的特质。在礼仪神学的影响下,基督教艺术的发展在中世纪艺术中出现了新的主题和解释。以前与基督教诲主题相关的情节在类型学注释的框架内得到了不同的看法。作者指出,在中世纪艺术中得到持续发展的主要 "教学 "情节是耶路撒冷圣殿中年轻基督的形象(《路加福音》2:41-51)。由于人们对婴儿耶稣形象的崇敬、对耶稣童年的普遍兴趣以及对圣母的崇拜,这一情节很受欢迎。在 15-17 世纪的圣像画中,情节中的论战成分常常被强调,场景被解释为争论的变体。在描写耶稣童年的启示录中,有神童与学校老师互动的情节,这些老师通常对神童表现出教育上的粗心大意,并承认他 "没有学习能力"。在插图中,孩子们同情并支持他们的 "同学",甚至将他奉为神。最后,在中世纪晚期,《主祷文》的故事流传开来,教师和传道者与听众的直接互动得到了阐述。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Christ as Teacher in classical European iconography
The article examines the visual embodiment of the theme of Christ's teaching in the European visual tradition. The author shows that the pedagogical metaphors of the Teacher and the Educator, vivid in the New Testament texts and the works of the first Christian writers, were reflected in the fine arts through certain iconographic formulas. An assumption is made about the possibility of a pedagogical interpretation of the symbolic image of the Good Shepherd (basing on Clement of Alexandria). Variations in the image of the Teacher in the works of the 4-5th centuries are also analyzed: these are compositions with Christ the Wonderworker and Christ the Philosopher, which had different iconographic prototypes. Regardless of the characteristics of the portrait interpretation of Christ, special attributes (rhetorical gesture, pallium, scroll or open codex) allow to identify Him as a Teacher. The view on Christ as the Teacher and righteousness and divine wisdom, incomparable with earthly knowledge, is a specific of the patristic tradition. The development of Christian art under the influence of liturgical theological the formation caused appearance of new subjects and interpretations in medieval art. Plots previously associated with the theme of Christ’s teaching receive a different view within the framework of typological exegesis. The author shows that the main “pedagogical” plot, which received consistent development in the art of the Middle Ages, is the image of the young Christ in the Jerusalem temple (Luke 2:41-51). The plot was popular due to the veneration of the image of the baby Jesus, general interest in His childhood, and also in connection with the cults of the Mother of God. In the iconography of the 15-17th centuries the polemical component of the plot is often emphasized, with the scene being interpreted as a variant of a dispute. In apocryphal texts dedicated to the childhood of Jesus, there are episodes of interaction between the Divine Youth and school teachers, who generally showed pedagogical carelessness towards the child and recognized His “disability to learn.” In illustrations of the plot children sympathize and support their “classmate” and even glorify Him as God. Finally, in the late Middle Ages, the story of the giving of the Lord's Prayer was spread, with the direct interaction of the Teacher and Preacher with their listeners articulated.
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