Our Lady, Queen of Apostles - My Entrance Holy Card!
Behold, a beautiful image of Our Lady as Queen of Apostles, drawn by Matthew Alderman of the Shrine of the Holy Whapping blog, per my request!
For a larger version of the image, go to Matthew's original post, here.
I wanted to post this gorgeous image earlier, but decided to wait and only do so if Matthew did first - we must respect our artists! As he has now posted it, I will let him describe the image himself (and be sure to check out his other works, many available on the Shrine's blog):
Our Lady, Queen of the Apostles, with an Attendant Angel (version I). Commissioned for the announcement of the entry of a young lady into the convent of the Benedictines of Mary, Queen of the Apostles. 4" x 6", Ink on Vellum, pieced together in Photoshop. April-May 2008. Artist's Collection.
There is not much of a fixed iconography built up around the Virgin as Queen of Apostles, besides an association with Pentecost. One seventeenth-century treatise cataloging her various titles and emblems shows a curious image in which she is shown twice--first on clouds, above, encircled by an enormous hoop marked with the signs of the Zodiac, and accompanied by an angel bearing a crown, and below, with the apostles at Pentecost. Another, more modern emblem consisted of a large closed royal crown surrounded by twelve tongues of flame.
Originally, I had intended to show Our Lady richly dressed, and crowned with an enormous diadem, surrounded by the twelve shields of the Apostles. It then occurred to me that while in images of her as Queen of Heaven and Empress of the Universe she should be shown dressed as splendidly as possible, the beatific poverty of the Apostles suggested she should be far more simply dressed, with the elaborate falling folds of drapery being all she needed to manifest her simple beauty in this particular instance.
Her hair modestly covered by her plain hood, and the only touches of ornament at her throat and wrists. The Virgin's hair is not, as it might appear at first glance, bobbed, but pinned up behind her head in the manner of Abbot Thayer's numerous allegorical females. Likewise, she does not wear her crown, but is accompanied by an angel bearing it; the diadem is topped by a cross holding a very small image of Christ enthroned in its center, and one of the four plaques on the rim contains one of the four zoomorphic emblems of the Evangelists. The flame of the Holy Ghost, her eternal spouse, hovers over her head, and appears again enclosed within her brooch. The arrangement of the Apostles' emblems is in itself symbolic, with Peter and Paul--who frequently replaces Matthias--on Our Lady's right, and the other ten on the other side, with John singled out as the only non-martyr. The "P" in APOSTOLORUM below also does double-duty as a Chi-Rho, the combined monogram of the first two letters of "Christ" in Greek.
This drawing was pieced together on Photoshop from two other drawings, after I discovered the dark reddish-brown backdrop for the Apostles' shields did not register very well in a JPG; but all the drawing is done by hand, and is original.
FYI - per Matthew, the "key" for the Apostles' shields is as follows:
(columns from left to right, from the top down)
Keys - Peter
Scripture & Sword - Paul
Cockleshells - James the Greater
Cross - Philip
Ship - Simon
Face of Christ - Jude
Moneybags - Matthew
Flaying Knives - Bartholomew
X Cross - Andrew
Carpenter's Square & Spear - Thomas
Chalice & Serpent - John
Saw - James the Lesser
2 Comments:
Great! I saw the proof on the Whapping and was wondering if it was yours. Regina Apostolorum, ora pro nobis!
It is really lovely. I'm thinking of you as you prepare to enter next week . Prayers for you.
Post a Comment
<< Home