Code: ZE05092222
Date: 2005-09-22
A Hushed
St. Peter's; Theology of the Pietą
New Rules
Mean a Quieter Basilica
By Elizabeth
Lev
ROME, SEPT.
22, 2005 - In Italy, the "tramontana" is the brisk wind that blows
away the lazy days of summer and brings the crisp, busy days of
autumn. This September, it seems that a tramontana is gusting through
St. Peter's, as new rules and policies are enacted through the basilica.
While some
tourists may be dismayed by the changes, pilgrims will be delighted
by the metamorphosis.
One new regulation
requires all large groups touring the basilica to wear headsets
while the guide speaks into a microphone. In the inevitable chaos
surrounding the implementation of a new policy, several astonished
tourists have seen their guide forbidden to speak in the absence
of the so-called whisper sets. The sets are available for rental
at the entrance to the basilica, but one should reserve ahead as
they tend to be always taken.
The custodians
are also strictly enforcing a no-tour rule from 4:30 p.m. on. Whisper
set or no, large groups cannot tour the basilica as the sacristans
are preparing for the 5 p.m. Mass.
The result
is a thorn in the side for guides, but a joy for the faithful. St.
Peter's is quieter than it has been in years -- even when cruise-ship
companies disgorge thousands of tourists at once in the basilica.
Instead of the din of explanations of this sculpture or that architectural
marvel, there is a steady but low buzz of sound throughout the church
until 5 p.m. when the choir washes away the day's business leaving
prayer and praise in its wake.
These changes
are part of Benedict XVI's desire to reclaim the basilica for the
faithful and to enhance their experience of prayer and meditation
in the church. Now in St. Peter's there is not only an atmosphere
to pray but encouragement to do so.
Art of Compassion
Last week
on Sept. 15, the feast of Our Lady of Sorrows, many a frustrated
photographer was forced to jockey from one side to another of the
balustrade in front of Michelangelo's Pietą to get a clear picture
of the statue. Instead of the clear glass and bare altar, the chapel
contained two large lit candelabra, and an offering of flowers before
the statue.
For the first
time in many years, the Pietą revealed itself not only as a watershed
work of Renaissance sculpture, but also as masterpiece of devotional
art. Visitors and pilgrims alike were invited to think about the
meaning of "Pietą" (compassion) as they meditated on the image of
the Blessed Virgin holding her Son for a few moments before his
entombment.
In Christian
eyes, the innovations of Michelangelo become less of an aesthetic
pleasure and more of a stimulus to prayer.
The pyramid
composition, lauded as a triumph of the High Renaissance, serves
not only to give order and monumentality to the work, but binds
the Mother and Son together so that she appears as a living shroud
for her Son. This composition, employed regularly for images of
the Madonna and Child, reminds us how she held the infant Christ
on her knee, as now she holds him one last time, limp and lifeless
in her arms.
The high polish
of Christ's body, touted by guides as the only time Michelangelo
gave marble such a bright shine, contrasts sharply with the shadows
in the heavy folds of Mary's drapery. When looking at the work,
the first impression is that of weighty grief and sorrow, but deeper
meditation hints at something else. Mary does not weep in anguish
as in earlier Pietąs; rather, she is solemn and resigned -- a reminder
of her obedience to God's will. The surface of Christ's body reflects
light, so that from the heart of the stone or the tomb, instead
of darkness there is illumination.
Finally, to
many visitors, the bare altar under the statue seems like a kind
of pedestal, there to raise the statue to a better viewing position.
But the sculpture only reveals its true meaning when it is above
an altar.
Mary's right
hand still cradles her Son but the left has released him and opens
in a gesture of offering. At the same time, the body of Jesus seems
to be precariously balanced in his mother's lap and about to fall
onto the altar. When Mass was offered daily before the Pietą, at
the moment of consecration, Michelangelo's work dramatically represented
the Body of Christ coming to the altar and gave vivid witness to
the Real Presence.
In this Year
of the Eucharist, could there be a more beautiful and eloquent reminder
of the suffering, sorrow and sacrifice of Mary and Jesus for our
salvation?
Atheist Amid
the Sacred
An atheist
artist in St. Peter's? It already strikes one as strange that Bertel
Thorvaldson, a Protestant, was hired for the tomb of Pope Pius VII.
But why did they hire an artist who placed his faith in the Communist
Party rather than in God?
Giacomo Manzł,
sculptor of the Doors of Death in St. Peter's, more often than not
is presented in this fashion as a sort of success story of secularism
triumphing in the bastion of Christian art. Even a new exhibition
in the nearby town of Alatri, entitled "Manzł and Classical Beauty,"
attempts to emphasize the paganizing qualities of his art.
But for all
the portraits of Manzł's mistress Inge and the still-life themes
of fruits and chairs, the fact is that no retrospective of the Italian
artist who died in 1991 can ever be considered complete without
some of the dozens of religious-themed works he produced.
Giacomo Manzł
was born in Bergamo in 1908. His father was the sacristan of Sant'Alessandro
in Colonna when 25-year-old Father Angelo Roncalli gave his first
homily. Baptized and raised in a devout family, Manzł showed artistic
talent at an early age and trained to become a sculptor.
His career
started with a major religious commission, the chapel of the Universitą
Cattolica of Milan, but suffering and war haunted the young man.
First the death of his parents and then the deaths of his first
two daughters marked Manzł's first years of maturity. Later, when
the Nazis invaded Italy, Manzł participated in the Resistance where
he met and befriended many people who would later become the key
figures in Italy's Communist Party.
Manzł declared
himself an atheist at one point in his life and always maintained
close ties with his friends from the Resistance days. He was awarded
the Lenin Prize in Moscow for his artwork and erected the Lenin
monument in Capri. For these reasons, many objected when Manzł won
the prestigious commission in 1952 to design a new set of doors
for St. Peter's Basilica, the Doors of Death.
Yet when he
sculpted the reliefs of the "Crucifixion" and the "Deposition,"
this artist modeled bronze panels in gnarled lumps and barbed, angular
ridges to convey the experience of suffering in the material itself.
His famous
series of "Cardinals," bronze statues of the Princes of the Church,
are often described as expressing Manzł's disdain for these men
through the rigid poses and stylized faces.
These figures
are formed as pyramids or tall columns, however, shapes of stability
and endurance. Their robes swoop in dynamic curves. Rather than
rigidity, the cardinals convey contained energy. Perhaps the artist
saw more than modern critics think.
Pius XII hired
Manzł for St. Peter's Basilica, Blessed John XXIII had his portrait
done by him, and Paul VI bought a chapel executed by the sculptor
for the Modern Art collection of the Vatican Museums. As often happens
in art, there seems to be more here than meets the eye.
Manzł's encounter
with John XXIII affected the artist profoundly. Archbishop Loris
Capovilla accompanied the artist to his first meeting with the Pope
and wrote about the meeting in the foreword to the catalogue "Giacomo
Manzł: The Artist and the Sacred."
He described
how the two men spoke in dialect as they were both from the same
region, but Manzł only realized he had been speaking so familiarly
after several minutes of conversation. The archbishop recounted
how moved the sculptor was in the presence of the Holy Father.
Manzł saw
the Pope many times during the pontificate and held him in great
respect, but perhaps one of the most significant encounters was
after the Pontiff's death. Manzł was sent to make plaster casts
of the face and right hand of John XXIII. After this he made an
important addition to the Doors of Death. He added a panel representing
the holy and prayerful death of the Pope.
The calm serenity
of Christian death appears to have touched the artist greatly. Archbishop
Capovilla wrote that at the end of the artist's life, when Manzł's
physical strength had gone and "he could no longer draw or model
clay, his tired hand was able to make the sign of the Cross."
It seems that
as Manzł was sculpting death, his doors were opening a path to a
new life.
* * *
Elizabeth Lev teaches Christian art and architecture at Duquesne
University's Italian campus. She can be reached at lizlev@zenit.org.
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