Sacred Heart of Jesus (Batoni)
Sacred Heart of Jesus | |
---|---|
Artist | Pompeo Batoni |
Year | 1767 |
Medium | Oil on canvas |
Dimensions | 74.8 cm × 62.2 cm (29.4 in × 24.5 in) |
Location | Church of the Gesù, Rome |
The Sacred Heart of Jesus is an oil painting by the Italian artist Pompeo Batoni, painted in 1767.
Description
The work depicts Christ wearing a red tunic symbolising his blood, martyrdom and humanity; and a blue mantle which symbolises heaven and his divinity. Batoni gave Jesus long hair and a sparse beard, while in his left hand is his heart aflame, with a crown of thorns and topped by a cross. Batoni's painting became the most popular devotional image for the Sacred Heart of Jesus.[1]
History
Batoni was born 18 years after Saint Margaret Mary Alacoque died, the Visitadine nun whose visions of Jesus and his Sacred Heart inform any depictions.[2] These apparitions were said to have began as she prayed to Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament on 27 December 1673 – the feast of Saint John the Evangelist.
She described his Sacred Heart as follows: "The Divine Heart was presented to me in a throne of flames, more resplendent than a sun, transparent as crystal, with this adorable wound. And it was surrounded with a crown of thorns, signifying the punctures made in it by our sins, and a cross above signifying that from the first instant of His Incarnation, [...] the cross was implanted into it [...]."[1]
The Batoni portrait remains an altarpiece in the northern side chapel of the Jesuits’ Church of the Gesù in Rome.[2]
Batoni was later commissioned by Maria I of Portugal in the 1780s to create a larger series of paintings on the same subject for the Basilica of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in Lisbon.[3]
References
- ^ a b "The Most Famous Image of the Sacred Heart". Missionaries of Divine Revelation. 27 June 2019. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
- ^ a b "The Most Sacred Heart of Jesus". Catholic Art Company. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
- ^ Seydl, Jon L. (January 2003). "The Sacred Heart of Jesus: Art and religion in eighteenth-century Italy". pp. 1–451. Retrieved 13 July 2021.