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                                               Intro Mary Garden

In Search of a Mary Garden Statue

. Mary, Seat of Wisdom Mary, Seat of Wisdom - A Statue for Garden Meditations. John S. Stokes, Jr. To know the Blessed Virgin Mary is to love her. To love her is to want to know her better so we can love her more, and to love her more is to want to dedicate or consecrate ourselves to her service as a means of better knowing, loving and serving her Divine Son and Lord, Jesus Christ. We first learn to know Mary through the Church's spoken, written and visual arts teaching of her life, virtues, privileges, graces, mysteries and glories. Later we learn to know her better through hours of prayer and meditation, using a few simple, direct aids such as memorized prayers, holy pictures and statues. We first learn to love Mary as the blessed and immaculate Virgin, as the tender and loving Mother of Jesus, and as our own queen and mother gloriously assumed into heaven whom Jesus has given us as our merciful intercessor and mediatrix with him. It is thus that she has appeared in our day at Lourdes and Fatima to quicken our faith, love and reparation, and it is thus that we most frequently see her represented in pictures and statues. Mary is pure, sweet, tender, loving and merciful, and so must be her likeness. But as we continue to use such likenesses of Mary as aids for meditation, we come to realize how far short they fall, regardless of their artistic merits of portraying her beauty, goodness and immaculate purity, or of representing by facial expression her joys, sorrows or tenderness. We therefore turn to more abstract aids for meditating on Our Lady, such as her traditional symbolical titles from her litany, the scriptures and the writings of the Church Fathers: Spiritual Vessel, Mystical Rose, Tower of Ivory, Morning Star, Garden Enclosed, Fountain Sealed Up, Unspotted Mirror, Lily Among the Thorns, Well of Living Waters, Burning Bush, Tree of Life, New Paradise of Eden, Spotless Lily, Bundle of Myrrh, Holy Gentle Breezes, Plentiful Showers, Flowering Vine, Beautiful Dove, Cluster of Cypress, Rose Unfading, Beauty of Angels. Or, seeking more tangible signs and symbols, we turn to the medieval "Flowers of Our Lady" which were used in popular religious tradition to recall and signify Mary's life, mysteries and virtues, and which today are once again being prayerfully grown and used in "Mary Gardens" dedicated to Our Lady. Truly no work of human artistry can equal the rose in representing Mary's beauty, or the lily in representing her spotless purity. Likewise, no portrait likeness can equal the simplicity, directness, clarity and beauty, touching the heart of such flower symbols as: Our Lady's Tresses (Briza), Eyes of Mary (forget-me- nots), Our Lady's Tears (Tradescantia), Our Lady's Earrings (balsam), Mary's Heart (bleeding heart), Mary's Thorn (eglantine), Mary's Hand (Cinquefoil), Our Lady's Fingers (honeysuckle buds) Our Lady's Nightcap (Canterbury bells), Our Lady's Mantle (morning glory), and Our Lady's Slippers (Cypripedium). Mary's gracious movements and the tender changes of her expression under the promptings of the Holy Ghost are better reflected in the play of light and the rustling of the breeze in the garden than in sculpture and painting. Bernard Berenson, the late dean of authorities on Italian Renaissance painting, wrote in his "Sketch for a Self-Portrait": "As I walk in the garden, I look at the flowers and shrubs and trees and discover in them an exquisiteness of contour, a vitality of edge or a vigor of spring, as well as an infinite variety of color that no artifact I have ever seen . . . can rival." Or, in the words of the Gospel: "Consider the lilies . . . . Not even Solomon in all his glory was clothed like one of these." In speaking to a gathering of rose growers, Pope Pius XII observed that when Our Lady appeared at Lourdes in all her personal beauty and goodness: "Each of her feet was adorned with a blooming rose. She whom the Church had just proclaimed the Immaculate Conception manifested in this way, to a poor and artless child, the fullness of her perfections and the delicacy of her goodness." Nonetheless, a statue of Our Lady is fittingly used in a garden of her flower symbols as the focal point of the plantings, and also as the focal point for our praises, veneration, prayers and meditations. But if a statue cannot equal flowers and flower symbols in representing and recalling Mary's beauty, goodness and purity or her joys, sorrows and tenderness, what manner of statue is suitable for Mary Garden use? For an answer we can turn to the same ages of faith which produced most of the flower symbols of Mary. We can turn in particular to the Romanesque Virgins of Majesty which were the earliest statues of Our Lady in medieval France and which have been described as reigning over all the West from the 10th to the 12th centuries, with their replicas eventually finding their way into the tympanni of such renowned cathedrals as those of Chartres and Notre Dame of Paris. The humble and anonymous artists of the Romanesque age of intense faith and devotion did not presume to produce portrait likenesses of Mary's beauty and purity or of her tender, joyful or sorrowful expressions in their statues, but instead used symbolical form, position, bearing, gesture, clothing, adornmnent, signs and emblems to manifest her truths with only a restrained trace or hint of expression to suggest her tenderness, joy or sorrow. When Mary lived on earth, her beauty and tenderness were manifested, but her truth was hidden. During the "hidden" life of Jesus at Nazareth it was not perceived that he was God or that Mary was the Mother of God. In the Romanesque Virgins of Majesty, on the other hand, Mary's beauty and tenderness are, as it were, hidden and her truth is manifested. The Romanesque artists fashioned the goodness of images which beautifully manifested the truth of Mary. Their beauty, sought after by the great museums of the world, is not the beauty of Mary's appearance but of her truth. It is a heavenly beauty resulting from the artists' love of heavenly truth above earthly beauty. These images are devoid of the vitality of line and dynamic tensions which visually draw the beholder out of himself and lift him up externally. Instead, their symbolical elements are clothed and supported with balanced and hamonious rhythms, producing in the beholder the visual quiet and repose which induce the devout interior recollectedness of meditation and contemplation. Dom Angelico Surchamp, O.P., in "Le Signification de l'Art Roman" has characterized Romanesque art by saying: "Because it minimizes its own worth and gazes upwards at loftier goals, it surpasses and attains more than itself". In the words of the contemporary French artist, Marcel Gromaire, "The Romanesque Virgins of Auvergne are a perfume of the earth. They are earthly columns crowned with heaven with no lapse of continuity. They are in fact corridors from earth to heaven . . . vertical furrows made by men." Their simple beauty and trace of expression attract the eye, but their silent stillness and symbolical truth lift the eye heavenward in meditation. In later centuries, artists presumed to portray Our Lady's beauty and tenderness more fully in their statues and paintings, but in so doing produced either a tactile, sensate, earthly beauty and expression which were incompatible with the truth of her immaculate purity and perpetual virginity, or a weightless, ethereal, sentimental portrayal of her appearance of purity and holiness which was incompatible with the truth of her humanity and therefore of her human motherhood of Jesus Christ, true God and true man. When Mary was alive on earth, surely her sublime natural beauty and tenderness were transformed by the immaculate purity and holiness shining forth from her bearing, countenance and eyes. But the moment it was attempted to portray her in the lifeless material of a painting or statue, her purity was lost in the portrayal of her beauty and tenderness, or her humanity was lost in the portrayal of her purity. By representing Mary's body as motionless and her face as restrained in expression, the Romanesque sculptors humbly acknowledged the limitations of the lifeless wood and stone with which they worked, and left the full envisioning of her beautiful and tender appearance to the inner imagination and intuition of the beholder. In their statues, they sought to represent the truth of Mary, not her appearance, as though repeating Jesus' rebuke, "Blessed are those who believe without having seen." From the viewpoint of those in any age who strive to know Mary better in order that they may love her more, an image which manifests the certainty of her truth as it is known through revelation, dogmatic definition and theological teaching is to be preferred to one which uncertainly portrays an imagined, particularized and therefore untrue representation of her beauty and tenderness. Likewise, a statue which manifests the truth of Mary serves to draw the inner eye of the beholder to meditation and contemplation, while one which portrays her beauty and tenderness often holds the eye in outward esthetic enjoyment of the statue itself. The tradition of symbolically representing the truth of Mary in art goes back to the earliest centuries of the Church, but its real beginning dates from the Council of Ephesus in 431. Prior to this council, Mary had been venerated as the Blessed Virgin of prophecy, as the mother of Christ, as the holy model of Christian virtue and as the mother of the beginning Church. But it was not until after four centuries of questioning, clarification and further dogmatic definition of the doctrine of the Trinity that Mary's full dignity and mystery, not only as the Mother of Christ but as the Holy Mother of God, was defined and proclaimed at Ephesus, in the words of St. Cyril of Alexandria: "If anyone does not confess that Emmanuel is really God, and that therefore the Blessed Virgin is truly the Mother of God, for she bore in the flesh the Word of God Incarnate, let him be anathema." In the visual arts of painting, mosaic and sculpture, the newly defined dogma of the Divine Maternity of Mary was proclaimed to the faithful and presented for their meditation and contemplation with its fullest symbolic content in images known as the Virgin enthroned or Madonna of Majesty, or simply as "Majesties". This image of the Blessed Virgin was seated in a frontally erect position on a throne with the image of the Christ Child seated on her knees. The image of the Christ Child held the Book, symbol of the Eternal Word of God, in his left hand, and held his right hand raised with index and middle fingers extended in the sign of benediction. Both images were seated with head and body centered and aligned in severely frontal, straightforward position, with restrained facial expressions. Sometimes the image of the Christ Child held in its left hand, in place of the book, a globe, symbol of the world which Christ came to save, or a pomegranate, symbol of resurrection and of the Church. In Byzantine mosaics, this representation of Mary was known as the Nikopeia or "dispensatrix of victory", the victory of the Divine Child and His Virgin Mother, over evil, and the resulting distribution of graces and blessings to the human race. In sculpture the artistic tradition of the divine maternity of Mary was more fully developed in the famous Romanesque Virgins of Majesty of Auvergne. It is recorded that around the year 950, prior to which for a number of centuries there were no religious statues in France, Etienne II, Bishop of Clermont-Ferrand, ordered his architect and goldsmith, Aleaume, "to construct a golden throne adorned with precious stones and to place on it the image in fine gold of the Mother of God, with the image of Our Lord, her Son, seated on its knees". The golden virgin of Clermont-Ferrand (actually a gilded wood carving) became a famous pilgrimage virgin, and replicas were made throughout the region and elsewhere up until the beginning of the 13th century. The original statue is no longer in existence, but numerous replicas are illustrated and listed in the monograph, "Viergeses Romanes D'Auvergne", by Emile Male and others, and as previously mentioned, replicas can be found in the tympanni of such renowned cathedrals as those of Chartres and Paris. The religious significance of the Virgins of Auvergne has been set forth in the book "L'Auvergne, Berceau de l'Art Roman", by Andre Gybal. In these statues, the effect of the enthroned formally erect and frontal pose of Mary's image, and its restrained expression, was to instill in the beholder a sense of the infinite dignity, majesty, solemnity and mystery of the Mother of God. It was not the image of just any mother and child. Likewise the Book, the distortion of Jesus' image, and the gesture of benediction, leave no room for the misperception that a merely human child was imaged. Yet the images were clearly those of human motherhood and childhood so that there was no loss of the sense of Mary's and Jesus' human nature. Mary is imaged as both the throne of the Eternal Word which she presents to the adoration of mankind, and also as the human instrument of the Incarnation. The clothing of this image of Our Lady is also of traditional origin, and consists of three pieces: a veil covering her head but letting her hair show over her forehead; a full mantle draped over her shoulders and arms; and a long matron's robe or dress. The mantle gives the image of the Virgin a sacerdotal character and dignity, recalling her role as co-redemptrix of the human race through her close union and cooperation with Christ, the Redeemer, yet it avoids an exact duplication of priestly garments which would suggest, erroneously, that she was priest\ess rather than co-redemptrix. On the other hand, the simple veil and dress bespeak Mary's humility, modesty and poverty and give the faithful confidence to approach her in prayer. Although she is represented enthroned as the Holy Mother of God and most-powerful Queen of Heaven and Earth, she is still the humble Carpenter's wife from Nazareth. The faces of the Auvergne Virgins of Majesty are restrained and almost impassive, yet they bear a trace or suggestion of sadness or sometimes of a wistful smile, hinting of Our Lady's sorrows or joys but avoiding a portrait-like expression. Finally, the distortedly large hands of Mary's image signify that hers are queenly and motherly hands which give Christ to mankind and also distribute to it innumerable gifts of graces, blessings and mercy. The images recall visually the two attributes which St. Bernard used to characterize Mary: majesty and mercy, as invoked in the Salve Regina: "Hail Holy Queen, Mother of Mercy . . ." Holy Mary is not only our beautiful, loving, merciful mother, intercessor and mediatrix. She is also Mother of God, Queen of Heaven, Virgin Most Powerful, Mirror of Justice, Tower of David, House of Gold, Ark of the Covenant and City of God - showing forth God's truth, glory, splendor and majesty. She is as fair as the moon, but also as bright as the sun and terrible as an army set in battle array. In her appearances at Lourdes and Fatima, she has been beautiful and tender but also bathed in a dazzling radiance of glory and splendor. As Holy Mother of God, Mary is merciful, but also majestic, and our devotion and consecration to her are imperfect if we beseech her mercy but fail to venerate her majesty and splendor. That Mary's immaculateness, majesty and mercy were all seen as attributes of her images as the enthroned Mother of God is evidenced by her titles from the writings of the Church Fathers, such as: Immaculate Throne of God, Seat not inferior to the Cherubim Seat, Lap of the Joy of Salvation, Mercy-Seat of God, Throne of Grace and Judgement Seat. Images of the Virgin Enthroned or Madonna of Majesty were also often known by the title of the "Seat of Wisdom". According to this title the throne is sometimes reduced to a simple chair or stool, and the primary symbolism of the image is that Mary herself is the throne or seat of the Divine Wisdom Incarnate. In this symbolism everything is retained which has been described previously of the "Majesties", but the image of the Divine Child always holds the Book, symbol of the Divine Wisdom incarnate. In addition, Mary's relationship to the Divine Child is enriched in several ways. First, the imaging of Mary more specifically, and therefore more symbolically, as the throne or seat of the Divine Wisdom incarnate attributes to her all the dignity which comes from the ancient and universal symbolism of the chair, seat or throne. In a former day, only the king or bishop sat on a chair or throne, and no one else in the kingdom sat on individual chairs. In Japan today people sit on the floor in their homes because of this tradition. The symbolism of the dignity and power of the seat or chair is also preserved in such designations as the county seat, the chair of a university professorship, and the corporation chairman of the board of directors. It is also alive in such realities as the chair of the head of the family and the boss's desk in business. In the Church, the cathedral is the place where the bishop's chair, or cathedra, is located, in which he sits, officially, when he is not standing before God at the altar. The Pope speaks infallibly when he teaches, formally ex cathedra, out of his chair or throne. The liturgy celebrates the feast of the Chair of St. Peter recalling this teaching authority. In the Creed, it is an article of faith that the risen Christ "sitteth at the right hand of God, the Father Almighty". And, pertinently, in the Magnificat, Mary magnifies and rejoices in the Lord because "He hath put down the mighty from their seat, and hath exalted the humble" - words which almost could be used as a sub-title for the image of the Seat of Wisdom. In the light of these examples we come to a fuller appreciation of the dignity attributed to Mary when she was imaged symbolically as the Seat of Wisdom. In fact, in the 8th century, this image was attacked by the iconoclasts as attributing too much dignity to Mary, evoking of St. John Damascene in its defense the reminder that, "[Mary's] hands hold the Eternal and her knees are a throne more sublime than the cherubim". The image of the Seat of Wisdom also enriches the symbolism of the divine maternity in that the image of the Christ Child is often seated closer, to and more deeply in, the lap of the image of the Virgin Mother, instead of on its knees. The closeness and the similar frontal position of the two images recalls Mary's close resemblance to, and her spiritual unity with, the Divine Wisdom incarnate of which she herself is the created image and faithful mirror as wel1 as Mother, and whose glory and power she shares and reflects: Christ the Divine Child, Mary His Mother; Christ the heavenly Spouse, Mary the mystical Bride; Christ the Redeemer, Mary the Co-Redemptrix; Christ the New Adam, Mary the New Eve; Christ ascended into heaven, Mary assumed into heaven; Christ the Mediator with the Heavenly Father, Mary the Mediatrix with Christ; Christ the Sacred Heart, Mary the Immaculate Heart; Christ the King, Mary the Queen. The Virgin of Majesty of the Royal Portal Tympanum of Chartres Cathedral images this more deep-seated relationship of the Divine Child to His Virgin Mother. Mary's title, Seat of Wisdom, which in the liturgy is preserved in the Litany of Loreto, signifies in the broadest sense her role as the abiding place or resting place of Divine Wisdom, of which she is the chosen instrument. Conceived without sin, full of grace and faithful handmaid of the Lord, Mary was so filled with wisdom in preparation for her divine motherhood that she was, as it were, present with God the Father as daughter, companion and helper in the work of the creation of the universe. As the Mother of Christ, Divine Wisdom Incarnate, Mary, is his image, vessel, seat, cooperator and mystical bride in the work of the redemption. As the tabernacle or temple of the Holy Ghost, Mary, Mother of Divine Grace, is the seat of the uncreated Spirit of Wisdom in His work of sanctifying souls and renewing the face of the earth. It is in this sense that the Church applies to Mary in the Liturgy the passages from the Sacred Scriptures which describe Wisdom as the first-born of creation and the beginning of all God's ways, who dwells in the highest places on a throne in a pillar of cloud; and who, at his bidding, has taken root and dwells among men as the tree of life, a sweet smelling garden, and a well of life-giving waters (Proverbs, Chap. 8; Wisdom, Chap 7: Ecclesiasticus, chap. 24). This, then is a glimpse at the fullness of the glorious tradition of the divine maternity in sculpture, from which contemporary artists can draw and which they can continue and extend in selecting an image of Mary for the focal point for Mary Garden planting and prayers. And perhaps the most appropriate traditional model for our Mary Garden symbolism is the sculptured tympannum of the Cathedral of Notre Dame, Paris. This tympannum images the Virgin in Majesty as its focal point, with praising and adoring angels and saints to her left and right, and tableaus of her life and mysteries at her feet. Just as the dogmatic truth of Mary's divine maternity is the essence and summation of all the truths of Mary, so here, visually, the image of the Virgin in Majesty, symbolizing this truth, is the essence and summation of all visual representations of her life and mysteries shown at her feet, so that as in the Rosary al1 our meditations on Mary may be concluded with our invocation of her in praise and petition as, "Holy Mary, Mother of God". But where is one to obtain a contemporary image of Mary which embodies the fullness of this tradition? Or, in the words of Sister M. Joanne, S.N.D in Art for You and Me, "What has happened to the beautiful tradition in Christian art upholding the divine maternity of Mary?" To provide such an image for Mary Garden use, the noted liturgical artist, Ade Bethune, has designed an outdoor statue, "Mary, Seat Of Wisdom," illustrated in the accompanying photographs. As can be seen, the statue retains the full symbolism of the ancient images of the Virgin of Majesty and Seat of Wisdom. Yet it is not a mere copying of older works. Faithful to the living, growing character of tradition, and to the continuing dogmatic definition, theological development and artistic representation of the truth of Mary, the image embraces additional symbolical elements. Thus the base includes images of clouds and twelve stars recalling Mary's immaculate conception and her assumption into heaven. The curving line of the serpent recalls Mary as the Woman clothed in the sun of Revelations, who gave birth to the man child who thrust the dragon from heaven, and the Woman of Genesis whose seed was to crush the serpent with his heel on earth. Also, in a day when, in the Western world at least, people generally wear shoes, Mary's image is represented without shoes as a sign of her poverty and humility; while in former days, when people generally did not wear shoes, Mary's image was represented with shoes as a sign of her royalty. The out-turned hands of Mary's image recall that she is Our Lady Of Grace; our merciful mother and mediatrix who showers on us and distributes to us Christ's blessings and graces. They recall further that Mary is our heavenly advocate and intercessor who beseeches and receives of us the offerings of our spiritual intentions, acts, aspirations, ejaculations, penances and reparations that she may purify, adorn, embellish and present them to her divine Son and Lord. The gesture of the out-turned hands also completes the image of Mary as the Gate of Heaven who brings forth in Virgin Birth, manifests, shows and gives to us Christ, our Teacher, Priest and King, as she did to the adoring Magi of old, and as we ask that she will again when we pray ". . . and after this our exile, show unto us the blessed fruit of Thy womb, Jesus." Also she gives or presents Jesus to God, His Heavenly Father. Finally, the arms of Mary's image are, as it were, arms of the Seat and serve to clarify the symbolism of the Seat of Wisdom. In keeping with the practical requirements of molding reproductions and of avoiding water-catching folds for outdoor use, the image of Christ, the Divine Wisdom incarnate, has been seated or merged even more deeply in the lap of the image of Mary, also serving to strengthen the symbolism or Mary as the Seat of Wisdom, and especially the symbolism of the physical and spiritual unity of Mary and Jesus. The symbolism of unity has been heightened still further by the design of the folds of the veil, which artistically unite the heads of the images of Mary and Jesus. These folds also suggest the symbolism of halos about the heads of Mary and Jesus, as found so extensively in religious paintings of the divine maternity. The head of Mary's image is inclined slightly forward and its eyes slightly downward, directing attention to the image of Christ. Also, the articulation of the folds of the mantle, falling down from the arms of Mary's image, is simple, natural and reposeful, gently drawing the eye of the beholder to the image of Jesus. In praying to Mary before such an image of her unity and mediatorship with Christ, it is difficult indeed for one to conceive of her or to address her as isolated in any way from her divinely ordained and established true relationship to Christ. In keeping with the practical requirement of avoiding extended parts which might be broken in outdoor use, the right hand of Jesus' image points to the Book, instead of being raised in benediction. This gesture has the effect of drawing the beholder visually into the image rather than holding him at a distance from it. It also serves to accentuate the Book, bearing the inscription "Et Verbo caro factum est", and its primary symbolism that Jesus is the Divine Word incarnate. Jesus holds the Book, and Mary holds Jesus. The Book also recalls the Gospels and the Old Testament prophesies and types of Emmanuel - the Redeemer, the Suffering Servant, the Desired of the Nations, the Prince of Peace - who was to be born of a Virgin of the House of David and to suffer death on the Cross. Jesus' passion and death could be said to be anticipated by the trace of sadness in the restrained countenances of the images of Mary and Jesus. Finally, the image of the Christ Child with the Book prefigures Christ with the Book of Life at the Last Judgement, which will also be through Mary, the Gate of Heaven, whose eliptical image here, in the front view, frames the image of Christ in a manner recalling the almond-like aureoles enclosing the images of Christ in Judgement in the tympanni of Romanesque and Gothic cathedrals. While the traditional severe, frontal position and restrained serious expressions of the images of Mary and Jesus are retained to bespeak the great dignity, majesty, wisdom and mystery of the Mother of God, at the same time they are composed within a contemporary unity and harmony of design which give them a new simplicity, directness, clarity and beauty. In so far as is possible, without lessening the sense of Mary's majesty as Mother of God, a suggestion of her human, motherly tenderness has been introduced into her image, in the front view by the gesture of the out-turned hands, already mentioned, and in the side view by the forward inclination of the head, the downward inclination of the eyes, a hint of a smile on the lips, the encompassing gesture of the arms and hands and the closeness of the image of the Christ Child. Also, the side view suggests Mary's womanly beauty by the graceful overall curving and design of the lines and folds of the head, veil, shoulders, arms, hands, legs and feet. Yet the suggestion of tenderness is free of a particularized imaginative expression which would be false to Mary; and the beauty is free of particularized tactile values which would be incompatible with her immaculate purity. From the side view Mary's image is, as it were, clothed in her beauty, while from the front and principal view we behold the full symbolism of her majesty and mercy, which in turn lifts us to meditation on the sublime truth of Mary. Copyright, Mary's Gardens, 1958