Nailed to the Cross Via Dolorosa 11
by Lianne Schneider
Title
Nailed to the Cross Via Dolorosa 11
Artist
Lianne Schneider
Medium
Photograph - Digital Painting/photographic Art
Description
The 11th in a series of 14 images -
Photographic art based on a series of images I took myself of statues around the base of the 190 foot Groom Cross in Groom, Texas.
These images - 14 in all - are in fulfillment of a commission for a Catholic Church in Louisiana of 40x40 prints of the series that represent the 14 Stations of the Cross or Via Dolorosa (Way of Sorrows). These are vignettes of Jesus Christ's walk to Cavalry and his Crucifixion. Similar images in plaster, bronze, pewter, painted on wood panels or sculpted can be found in Christian churches throughout the world and in many communities, people from all denominations participate in "Living Stations" or "Passion plays" based on these same moments.
For many hundreds of years, from the early Middle Ages until more than a century after the Renaissance - Christian religious art dominated Western/European culture. Except for portraiture, one would have been hard put to find much secular art in Europe until the late 16th and 17th centuries.
Similar religious art still lives on in some places. In the small town of Groom, Texas, along Interstate 40, stands a 190 foot cross that can be seen across the Texas and Oklahoma panhandles from more than 20 miles away. Constructed by Steven Thomas over a period of 8 months, the huge metal cross stands today on private property near the highway. In the years following its construction, sculptor, Mickey Wells, created a series of life size bronze sculptures to add to the site. Twelve of these - representing 12 of the 14 Stations of the Cross - are placed in a circle around the central cross. Also called "The Way of Sorrows" or "Via Dolorosa," the stations depict the final hours in the life of Jesus - from his condemnation to his being laid in the tomb. There are many sensitive, enlightened people who are repelled by what seems to be a glorification of an especially brutal and gruesome death. My feeling is that the recreation of this Way of Sorrows is an attempt to understand and find meaning in suffering, particularly when it is undeserved. We ask this question every day when we are faced by the brutality human beings visit on one another and on other living creatures every single day. Why? Why do we visit such violence on each other?
One late October afternoon driving down to Texas, I was one of the 1000 people a day who stop to see the Groom cross. I had only a few moments just before sunset to take the pictures I wanted to take - and while I acknowledge that I am a Christian, albeit a very non-traditional one who embraces the teachings of the Masters of many faith traditions and non-religious philosophies, I have to admit that it was the artistry of the sculptor that totally engaged my interest and awe. In the dying and too brilliant light of sunset, I snapped as many shots as I could - unfortunately paying little attention to composition or framing of any single shot.
But looking at my rather poor photos, it occurred to me that I might preserve my own impressions of these sculptures and at the same time pay tribute to the nearly 1000 years of religious art that dominated the Western world throughout the Middle Ages right up until the post-Reformation period. Much of this kind of art can still be seen in churches and cathedrals all over the world as well as in the great museums that house the masterpieces of the Medieval and Renaissance periods. I post them here as ART. There is certainly no intention on my part to offend those of other religious traditions or non-religious traditions whose own artistic expressions I greatly admire. I've chosen to create my representation of four of the 14 stations along the Via Dolorosa in a style that I hope is reminiscent of the Middle Ages - using my own images of the sculptures found around the base of the Groom cross.
I would be remiss in not noting that all the textures including the one used for the background are from darkwood67 on Flickr.
Sincere thanks to the following groups for featuring this image:
WHEN YOU BELIEVE - LI
ARTISTS BEST FIVE ARTWORKS - TINA
MOTIVATION MEDITATION INSPIRATION - BARBARA
VISUAL VOICE - ANNIE
ARTISTIC INNOVATIONS - M AND L CREATIONS
FAA FEATURED IMAGES - ROBERT
ART FROM THE PAST - JOUKO
PREMIUM FAA ARTISTS - DAN MARINESCU
CATHOLIC ART GALLERY - FRANK
SIGNATURE STYLE ART - SHARON
INNOVATIVE ART FOR GOOD - ALICE
GREAT ART FOR COMMENTS AND VOTES - FAYE
EXCELLENT SELF-TAUGHT ARTISTS - JOE
Copyright Lianne Schneider 2013
This is a rights managed image available for licensing at http://licensing.pixels.com/profiles/lianne-schneider.html
All images and my personal poetry/prose are protected by copyright and may not be reproduced, downloaded, distributed, transmitted, copied, reproduced in derivative works, displayed, published or broadcast by any means or in any form without prior written consent from the artist. My copyright does not imply rights to an underlying public domain image and I make no such claim. Copyright on works derived from or based on images in the public domain applies only to the subsequent manipulation or the digital painting resulting from my own style and interpretation. The original image remains in the public domain and such images are used in accordance with international law.
Uploaded
March 4th, 2012
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Comments (83)
Jacek Dudzinski
Nice job! Keep up the good work! Great talent. I really would apreciate your feedback of my Photography ;-)
Jacek Dudzinski
Nice job! Keep up the good work! Great talent. I really would apreciate your feedback of my Photography ;-)
David Norman
Really powerful interpretation of Our Savior, Lianne! What great love and sacrifice we must all be grateful for!
Lianne Schneider
My sincere thanks Joe for featuring this work in EXCELLENT SELF-TAUGHT ARTISTS. You are always incredibly generous and kind to me and I am both grateful and honored. To all those who have also come by to leave a note this time around, I promise to get to your pages as soon as I can - I've a busy couple of weeks here and will have little time on the computer. But I will get there for sure!!
Lianne Schneider
Sharon, Alice and Faye - I'm incredibly honored that you've chosen to feature this work in your groups - SIGNATURE STYLE ART, INNOVATIVE ARTISTS FOR GOOD and GREAT ART FOR COMMENTS AND VOTES. Thank you so very much.
Frank J Casella
Lianne -- CONGRATULATIONS!! Your beautiful artwork has been featured by the - CATHOLIC ART GALLERY - Fine Art Group on FineArtAmerica! Thank you for sharing it !!
Lianne Schneider
My most sincere thanks to Robert, M and L Creations, Jouko, Dan and Frank for featuring this artwork in your wonderful groups - FAA FEATURED IMAGES, ARTISTIC INNOVATIONS, ART FROM THE PAST, PREMIUM FAA ARTISTS and CATHOLIC ART GALLERY. I'm tremendously honored and so very grateful.
Lianne Schneider
Annie, Joseph and Barbara, I am so incredibly grateful and honored that you have chosen to feature this work in your wonderful groups - VISUAL VOICE, IMPRESSIONISM and MOTIVATION MEDITATION INSPIRATION. It's so very meaningful for me especially at this time of the year.