Mary's grief powerfully communicated in "Pietà with Donors" at The Metropolitan Museum of Art

ALPHA OMEGA ARTS
Pietà with Donors, ca. 1515. French. Limestone, traces of polychromy. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Gift of J. Pierpont Morgan, 1916 (16.31.1).
NEW YORK---Here, Mary's grief over Christ's sacrifice is communicated through simple gestures. At the center, the Virgin Mary crosses her arms upon her chest and bows her head over her son's dead body. Her downward gaze throws her face into shadow, accentuating her sorrow (pietà in Italian). Surprisingly, the scene is witnessed by two individualized figures, whose clothing identifies them as a knight and a bishop. These are the donors, Pons de Gontaut and his brother Armand, Bishop of Sarlat, who commissioned this sculpture for their family funerary chapel. On the left, Armand cradles Christ's head in his outstretched hands, making him into a direct participant in the sacred past. On the right, his brother, clasps his hands and gazes somberly on the scene. Through the sculpture, the brothers assert a privileged place in this private moment, crossing time to witness Mary's grief. [More]