Charles Freeman
Student
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2015
- Messages
- 28
I am in Bologna setting up an art history tour there for later this year and I have been looking at works of art from the fourteenth and fifteenth century that leave the Shroud well behind. The artist could not even imagine that the hair would have fallen back on a lying figure and instead copied a conventional ( since c.AD 300) figure of Christ's head as if he were standing. There is nothing in it that cannot be found elsewhere in this period.
Most of these painted linens deteriorated quickly if they were not placed on a backing. Folding and refolding usually broke up the painted surface and they were thrown away. The Shroud was not a top level quality cloth - just look at paintings that show clothes from this period.
Actually judging from the descriptions and depictions of the Shroud, the original images appear to have lasted well. Depictions from the nineteenth century ( e.g of the 1868 exposition) suggest that it was then that they deteriorated and features that we know were once there, like the long hair at the back, disappeared. It was just at this point too that the cathedral authorities put it in a frame for the first time. They were clearly worried about something.
If the Zittau Veil ( of 1472) in Zittau in Saxony, can be taken for comparison, once the pigments fall off a linen painting (in the case of the Zittau Veil they were steamed off by looters in WW II), there are shadowy images remaining in the cloth where the paint once was, just as one finds on the Shroud. What, subject to specialist support, I think we have is the discolouration of the linen as a result of centuries of being covered in paint. Walter McCrone who for obvious reasons has been much derided by the Shroudies but who was more expert in his field of microscopy than any of them, did indeed find traces of the original pigment on the Shroud surface.
None of the hundreds of so-called Shroud researchers has ever been able to find a scrap of evidence that dates the linen of the Shroud before the medieval period. This does not make the Shroud any less interesting as it may be the only surviving example of a grave cloth used in the Easter ceremony of Quem Queritis when a shroud was held up before the congregation on Easter morning to show that Christ had risen. We know that some were painted. I guess the Shroud was designed for a large congregation - perhaps in a church with a long nave and poor light. After all the figures are larger than life size for the medieval period and the artist made two of them, front and back ( but they do not match each other!),to make the cloth more visible from a distance.
It was this ability to see the Shroud from a distance that made it such an excellent relic for the Savoys as they could show it off before vast crowds. It may even have been repainted from time to time to keep it visible.
As I say whenever asked, the Shroud was never intended to deceive. No one in the medieval period would ever have been taken in by a grave cloth with images in it when none are mentioned in the gospels or medieval iconography. This is one of many so-called 'authentic' relics that started its life as something else and the de Charny family conspicuously failed to convince anyone that it was authentic.
We must get more medievalists working in the weave,painting techniques for linen and iconography. I am beginning to get some feedback from professional medievalists who are getting interested and we may at last be able to put this altogether. But we have a long way to go!
Most of these painted linens deteriorated quickly if they were not placed on a backing. Folding and refolding usually broke up the painted surface and they were thrown away. The Shroud was not a top level quality cloth - just look at paintings that show clothes from this period.
Actually judging from the descriptions and depictions of the Shroud, the original images appear to have lasted well. Depictions from the nineteenth century ( e.g of the 1868 exposition) suggest that it was then that they deteriorated and features that we know were once there, like the long hair at the back, disappeared. It was just at this point too that the cathedral authorities put it in a frame for the first time. They were clearly worried about something.
If the Zittau Veil ( of 1472) in Zittau in Saxony, can be taken for comparison, once the pigments fall off a linen painting (in the case of the Zittau Veil they were steamed off by looters in WW II), there are shadowy images remaining in the cloth where the paint once was, just as one finds on the Shroud. What, subject to specialist support, I think we have is the discolouration of the linen as a result of centuries of being covered in paint. Walter McCrone who for obvious reasons has been much derided by the Shroudies but who was more expert in his field of microscopy than any of them, did indeed find traces of the original pigment on the Shroud surface.
None of the hundreds of so-called Shroud researchers has ever been able to find a scrap of evidence that dates the linen of the Shroud before the medieval period. This does not make the Shroud any less interesting as it may be the only surviving example of a grave cloth used in the Easter ceremony of Quem Queritis when a shroud was held up before the congregation on Easter morning to show that Christ had risen. We know that some were painted. I guess the Shroud was designed for a large congregation - perhaps in a church with a long nave and poor light. After all the figures are larger than life size for the medieval period and the artist made two of them, front and back ( but they do not match each other!),to make the cloth more visible from a distance.
It was this ability to see the Shroud from a distance that made it such an excellent relic for the Savoys as they could show it off before vast crowds. It may even have been repainted from time to time to keep it visible.
As I say whenever asked, the Shroud was never intended to deceive. No one in the medieval period would ever have been taken in by a grave cloth with images in it when none are mentioned in the gospels or medieval iconography. This is one of many so-called 'authentic' relics that started its life as something else and the de Charny family conspicuously failed to convince anyone that it was authentic.
We must get more medievalists working in the weave,painting techniques for linen and iconography. I am beginning to get some feedback from professional medievalists who are getting interested and we may at last be able to put this altogether. But we have a long way to go!