Here - The Green Man of Cercles
Transcription
Here - The Green Man of Cercles
The Green Man of Cercles A GREEN MAN VARIANT? : “BEASTS EMERGING from THE MOUTH or EARS – and SIRENS” Here are some juxtaposed images of masks with pairs of horns, or sometimes snakes, emerging from their mouths or ears. In most cases, these terminate in the heads of snakes, lions or other beasts. Fig 1 : Bridge Sollars, Herefordshire Sketch by Tina Negus See also, another artefact which shows horns (coming from the nostrils in this case) Fig 5 on http://www.green-man-of-cercles.org/articles/the_green_man_in_benin.pdf in the surprising context of an ivory from Benin, probably of the Baroque period : Fig 2 : Benin ivory decoration 1 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 3: from Contrée near Aulnay in the Saintonge These twin serpents appear to have emerged from the man’s ears. They are whorled like the horns of Bridge Sollars Fig 4 : from Königslutter, Germany This sculpture is by Maestro Niccolo, who worked at the Sacra di San Michele, near Turin, and in the region of Verona, where he has an impressive body of work including a fine Green Man. Is the sculpture here the source of influence for Green Men and Green Man variants at Gernrode, Goslar, Magdeburg and other German cathedrals? See supplement, at the end of this article. Fig 5 : Baltrusaitis's sketch of a capital from Tournus 2 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 6 : another capital from Tournus The heads on this capital are harbouring avian creatures with reptilian tails and mammalian heads with little ears. The creatures seem to be whispering in the mens’ ears while their tails disappear into the mens’ mouths. Fig 7 : Detail of a Snake Horn mask from Kilpeck Church, Herefordshire Unsurprisingly, this is the closest to my first image, from the same area. The style of the “Herefordshire School” is known as “Anglo-Normand” in France. It is possible that the craftsmen who worked here came from Normandy with their masters, so the roots of their cultural heritage might be traced to the art of the Vikings. This is often thought to be the case at Kilpeck. Are these masks blowing on the horns to announce a message? Here is a detail of Auster, the South Wind, from the "tapestry" in Gerona Cathedral. 3 The Green Man of Cercles Might there be a link between a Hellenic image that gave rise to this double hornblower and the sculptured ones above? Fig 8 : Auster, the South Wind, Gerona Cathedral Treasury Green Men are often described as “uttering” foliage; are these hornblowers “heralding” the onset of Spring or Renewal? Alternatively, are these negative images, images of sin? Are the horns a transformation of the tongue, which has become forked, like a serpent’s? Do the images represent the sin of calumny? Where the heads on the horns swivel inwards to whisper into the man’s ears, are they offering wicked information or advice? Fig 9 : Agen Cathedral of St Caprais 4 The Green Man of Cercles This capital in the Cathedral of St Caprais at Agen shows two men clothed in green, each holding a pair of horns in his mouth. On each side, the men are flanked by pairs of identical birds with long, snaky tails that curve round to enter the clothing of the men at the level of their knees. Visually, this provides mirror images at the lower level to the pairs of horns at the upper level. Meanwhile, the birds have beaks wide open and seem to be shrieking in the mens’ ears. The men have their arms round the necks of the birds; their hands support the widest part of the horns. The message may be that man’s bestial instincts (represented by the birds) afflict their phallic regions giving rise to lustful thoughts and thence evil propositions which they now proclaim, shamelessly. Snakes, which represented wisdom and renewal in Classical times became despised and feared as diabolical agents if not Satan himself in the Christian period. Thus, the ancient image of snakes or lions whispering good counsel which we see depicted on artefacts from the Middle East onwards may have changed their meaning over the millennia to signify the exact opposite, a situation that is mirrored in the way the “Femme aux Serpentes” image changed from Good Goddess to Bad Woman. In the abbey church of St-Chef in the Dauphiné, there is a fresco where snakes emerge from the mouth and fish from the ears of a diabolical head : Fig 10 : Head with emerging beasts from the intrados to the Chapel of St-Theudère in the abbey church of St-Chef. Here is the larger picture, showing the mask in its context : 5 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 11 : Head with emerging beasts and sirens from the abbey church of St-Chef. Mermaids are joining the battle, threatening the cynocephalic serpents with spears. Those strange, cup-like objects can now be assumed to be shells. Other elements complete the scene of life under the sea such as the griffin or senmurv-like fish and the squid that resembles the helmeted head of a warrior - (I have turned this picture on its side): Fig 12 : detail of sea monster, fish and squid Fig 13 : Fresco of marine life on the intrados of the chapel of St Theudère Suzanne Charlet, from whose web site - http://perso.orange.fr/fresques-romanes/ 6 The Green Man of Cercles I have borrowed these images – says, “Sea, fishes and shells relate back to Genesis, the first book of the Bible, and to the moment of THE CREATION. After creating light on the first day, on the second day God “made the firmament and divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters which were above the firmament” (Genesis I.7), and on the fifth day “He peopled these waters with living, swimming creatures.” (Genesis I.20). But this marine world is worrying. A great face in the middle with a slippery look and a smile full of teeth is spitting out horned snakes while fishes come out of its ears; symmetrically disposed monsters are fighting, while two armed sirens seem not to know where to place the lances with which they are attacking the horned snakes, as behind them others are rearing up, with wings, claws and horns, even pushing out a menacing three-pronged tongue; a jellyfish is hiding the peculiar face of a helmeted warrior. As regards the siren at the foot of the intrados, on the right, (the best preserved) she is fully occupied with her double tail terminating with the heads of the dragons from which she is defending herself by pushing them firmly aside. Since Eve, snakes and all crawling creatures are most often symbols of EVIL, and sirens in medieval iconography generally represent LUST. In this violent universe dominated by the false bonhomie of the central mask, how are we not to see an image of the world given over to Evil and the Devil since the Fall ? Finally, behind the intrados there is painted a large figure of Christ in majesty, enriching it in a new way by reference to the Apocalypse (VI.1), the final book of the Bible; “Before the throne (of God) there is like a sea of crystal”. This crystal sea, represented similarly in numerous manuscripts, is here at the entrance like a frontier to be crossed in order to approach the throne of God and to move into the divine universe of which the Church consists. This marine setting therefore represents at the same time the upper and the lower waters of the firmament.” Mermaids or sirens appear very frequently on Romanesque capitals and corbels, and symbolise Luxuria, or sinful woman like this one from Marignac in the Saintonge. Fig 14: Siren and fish on capital at Marignac As so often happens, the source of some of these images can be traced to classical models and thence to MS, which being both portable and capable of duplication, were widely disseminated. 7 The Green Man of Cercles Here is a Coptic Venus with sirens of the VI century : Fig 15: Venus and Sirens, Coptic Egypt, VIc, Musée du Louvre, Paris Venus’s alluring gesture of spreading out her hair is much repeated on Romanesque “Images of Lust”. Sirens sometimes have a single fish tail, more like our idea of mermaids, sometimes a forked tail like this typical siren from Mosnac in the Saintonge : Fig 16: Siren on corbel from Mosnac in the Saintonge The original logo for Starbuck’s coffee is another example : 8 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 17: Siren on old Starbucks coffee logo (Starbucks have subsequently Bowdlerised their image). Sometimes the siren not only clutches her tails but finds that they have turned into menacing beasts which she has to control, as illustrated in the Chapel of St Theudère : Fig 18 : Siren controlling the beasts on her tails, from the abbey church of St-Chef. A surprise to me was this image from the Mochica mural in the “Temple of the Moon”, Peru. (See, http://www.green-man-of-cercles.org/articles/the_green_man_in_benin.pdf ) 9 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 19 : Mochica mural in the “Temple of the Moon”, Peru This illustration is taken from a travel blog, “Lou in Peru”, which you can see in its entirety here: http://louperu.blogspot.com/ Fig 20 : Benin ivory decoration on a vase Another surprising ivory from Benin, probably of the Baroque period. For a description of this artefact, see Figs 6 & 7 on: http://www.green-man-of-cercles.org/articles/the_green_man_in_benin.pdf 10 The Green Man of Cercles This is surely a metaphor for female lust – a sin which Woman has constantly to struggle to control! However, there are numerous sculptures of men in this predicament, too. Fig 21 : Snake Man of Matha St Hérie, Saintonge The origin of this image may be the Anguipède : the eel-legged man, an example of which may be seen in the Musée Bargoin, Clermont Ferrand : Fig 22 : Anguipède and Rider, Musée Bargoin, Clermont Ferrand Here is another view of the same group : 11 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 23 : Anguipède and Rider, Musée Bargoin, Clermont Ferrand and here are the notices that go with it : 12 The Green Man of Cercles It is interesting to note that seven similar groups have been found in the Puy de Dôme alone, although they are apparently more common in Alsace, Eastern Gaul and the Rhine area. Presumably there are representations of Anguipèdes without riders oppressing them too, though no mention of that is made in the museum. The trail of the Anguipède is more ancient than the Gallo-Roman religion, however. It can be traced back to the Tritons, a race of marine giants, sons of Poseidon or Neptune. Here are some Triton images in sculpture from the 2nd c BC to the second c AD: Fig 24 : Wedding of Amphitrite and Poseidon, Munich, Glyptotek, 2nd c BC, attributed by Pliny to Scopas 13 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 25 : Tritons on the Gigantomachy (Battle of Men & Giants), Istanbul, Archeological Museum Ist century, from Aphrodisias Fig 26 : Triton on the Gigantomachy (Battle of Men & Giants), Munich, Glyptotek 2nd century, from Pergamon 14 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 27 : Triton on the Gigantomachy (Battle of Men & Giants), Berlin, Pergamon Museum, 2nd century, from Pergamon Depictions of Tritons are also found on Greek pottery and Roman mosaic. Another variety of Sirens with animal legs is the Mixoparthenos from the Black Sea region, whose body ends in twin snakes. The name means "half-maiden" and is the surname of the Furies. She mated with Hercules to produce three sons; the youngest became the founder of the Scythian nation. (Herodotus books 4-5) 15 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 28 : Siren and fish, St Georges d’Agouts, Saintonge Here the fish seems to be whispering in the siren’s right ear rather than emerging from it; on the other side, she is clutching her forked tail which is, similarly, nearly in her left ear. There is a very interesting piece of sculpture on the left of the façade of Rochester Cathedral which is in three parts or tympani : Fig 29 : Photographs of Rochester Cathedral by Liz Simmons - Two birds & chalice on the left, An image of lust seated like a mermaid holding a fish in one ear and with a large tongue sticking out. The creature with its mouth to the other ear might be a quadruped monster. 16 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 30 : The third arc shows a dragon-like monster preening its tail. The three sections are linked by lion masks with manes like foliage coming from their mouths; and we are told that there are twenty-three Green Men inside Rochester Cathedral. I presume the figure in the middle is an emasculated male (he has no breasts or hair) lusting (tongue sticking out) deaf to Good Counsel and obsessed by sex (represented by the fish in his ears). There is also a good photo and article here : http://www.sheelanagig.org/index.html#http://www.sheelanagig.org/SheelaRochester.htm The article refers us to Cunault between Angers and Chinon, Fig 31 : Cunault, Siren and fishermen 17 The Green Man of Cercles where a siren with a fish in each hand offers one to some fishermen in a boat. There is another siren and fish sculpted on a metope on the tower at Cunault : Fig 32 : Cunault, Siren and fish The article also refers us to : http://www.norman-world.com/angleterre/cultures/GB_FR/6/pic6-3e.htm showing a capital from the crypt at Canterbury Cathedral : Fig 33 : Canterbury Cathedral, male acrobats with fish and bowl A male acrobat on the shoulders of another, holds a fish in his right hand and a bowl in his left. 18 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 34: Stow Longa, Hunts, Siren on tympanum over priest’s door The Siren’s stance here reminds me of the one at St Georges d’Agout. Her companion creatures might be a dog and cat. These may be three sinful creatures in an unholy trinity. But I see that others fancy the "cat" is the Agnus Dei! (See also, my Note & Query, “Green Cats and Dogs”. In classical mythology, sirens were a known danger to sailors, luring them to their doom with their enchanting songs, flowing hair and bare bosoms. Odysseus managed to enjoy their charm from a distance while protecting himself by being chained to the mast. His sailors had to row with their ears plugged with wax. Sirens sometimes sat on rocks with a mirror in one hand, grooming themselves to attract attention. The origin of the most “luxuriant” sirens may be Venus herself. In the village of Langon in Brittany, there exists a chapel dedicated to St Venus, which retains a Gallo-Roman marine fresco which once decorated a private bathroom : 19 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 35: Venus and fish on a marine fresco from the Chapel of Sainte Agathe, Langon The curved wall of the 2nd century bath house was used by early Christians as an apse for the little chapel but it remained, “the Chapel of St Venus” until the 18th century when it was rededicated to St Agathe. See the article : http://www.ville-langon.fr/eglise_st_pierre.htm, then click on “La Chapelle St-Agathe”. To return to beast spewers, one is reminded of myths and folk tales in which the good are blessed by having gold coins or others valuable commodities emerge from their mouths while the wicked are punished by finding that they spew venomous toads or serpents. The former is a kind of Midas’s touch, though that story points the moral that blessings can be mixed and have to be used with care. A similarly ambiguous story is in the brother Grimm’s collection, “Tischlein deck dich”, in which an ass showers gold coins from its bottom. Compare that fanciful idea to the Green Bottom of Aulnay : Fig 36: “Green Bottom” of St Pierre d’Aulnay An early representation of a mermaid goddess : 20 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 37: Derketo, Phoenician fish-tailed goddess The 2nd century writer, Lucian of Samosata, in De Dea Syria, (the Syrian Goddess) acknowledges that at one time a paramount Goddess was worshipped in regions of the Ancient Near East and goes into details of the practices of her devotees. In “The White Goddess”, Robert Graves cited it as one of the few actual accounts of ancient Goddessworship. Lucian recounts his personal observations of the worship of the Goddess Atargatis (a form of Isthar or Astarte) at the temple of Hierapolis, in what is today Turkey. Concerning the Syrian Goddess by Lucian of Samosata I saw the likeness of Derketo in Phoenicia, a strange marvel. It is woman for half its length, but the other half, from thighs to feet, stretched out in a fish's tail. But the image in the Holy City is entirely a woman, and the grounds for their account are not very clear. They consider fishes to be sacred, and they never eat them; and though they eat all other fowls, they do not eat the dove, for she is holy, so they believe. I conclude as I began, with some “Green Man Variant” sculptures where reptiles from the mouth become whisperers in ears : 21 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 38 : Dore l’église, Auvergne, capital of man with reptiles’ tails held in his mouth, their heads whispering in his ears Fig 39 : Chalais, Vienne, head with snake tails held in the mouth – and bottom-shower The snakes are coiled neatly with their heads tending towards ear-whispering mode. The glum-looking head on the right is having no part in it, while the bottom-shower on the right of the heads on the capital may be expressing his feeling by his posture! 22 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 40: Human-headed monsters held in the mouth, capital by the entrance to the church at Chatillon sur Indre, Berry Not far away, at the Abbey of Fontgombault, another head holds two birds in its mouth : Fig 41: birds held in the mouth, Abbey of Fontgombault, Berry If birds are heavenly messengers, bringing wisdom and Good Counsel, this head may be seen as a sinner, refusing their message by gobbling them up! While at Matha Marestay, Gironde, there is a head that has two rather worn creatures in its mouth which may be birds, but I think they look rather like human-headed senmurvs. To me there is something rather solipsistic about these images : a denial of anything outside the head of the selfish sinner and – above all – disobedience regarding the authority of the Church. So the creature in the mouth may be the trapped soul of the head, especially when the creature is a bird, or it may be a gross reflection of the sinner in an even more bestial form. 23 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 42: Matha Marestay, Gironde, a head holding the tails of two creatures In the church at Pebrac, beyond Chanteuges in the Auvergne, there is a capital where heads are holding snakes by the tail, whose reptilian heads are whispering in their ears. Fig 43: Pebrac, Auvergne, heads holding the tails of two snakes While at Candes St Martin near Chinon we have an unusual example of a Green Man who spews both foliage and the tail of a reptile that whispers in his ear, at the same time! 24 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 44: Candes St Martin Green Man and whispering reptile Is it fanciful to conclude that this genre represents not only The Blasphemer or One who heeds Bad Counsel but actually depicts the person who has excommunicated himself by allowing these sins of mouth and ear to form a closed circuit, locking the sinner in his own world, apart from the Good who speak and hear no evil? Fig 45: San Prospero mosaic fragment, devil head with dragon horns, 1160, Musei Civici, Reggio Emilia Although this fragment is typical of Northern Italian mosaics of the Romanesque period, the design is surely inspired by one of the many Roman mosaics representing Okeanos such as this one from Cividale: 25 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 46: Okeanos mosaic fragment, Cividale di Friuli, Museo Civico or this one from Gaziantep Museum, Anatolia: Fig 47: Okeanos and Tethys mosaic fragment, Gaziantep Museum, Anatolia SUPPLEMENT: PICTURES OF GREEN MEN, BEASTS AND VARIANTS FROM GERMANY Here is Fig 4, a Green Man variant head from Königslutter again: 26 The Green Man of Cercles As indicated at the beginning of this article, this sculpture is the work of Maestro Niccolo of the Verona region, who worked extensively in this part of Germany. This sculpture (and indeed, all the examples given) should not be considered in isolation, but in the context of other work surrounding it. The close connection between what I have called a “Green Man Variant” and the original Green Man (or Green Beast) is underlined at Königslutter by the nature of Niccolo’s other sculptures here: Fig 1: Königslutter, sculptures on the exterior walls of the Cathedral lent by http://www.raymond-faure.com/Koenigslutter/koenigslutter-jagdfries-2.html 27 The Green Man of Cercles The photographs below are taken from Mathias Wenger’s site, “Atemgeburt”, http://www.derhain.de/MittelalterProjekt/Atemgeburt/Atemgeburt.html Figs 2 – 13 are from Gernrode Abbey: 28 The Green Man of Cercles 29 The Green Man of Cercles This is the last picture in the Gernrode series 30 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 14: Goslar Cathedral, first of 7 pictures from Goslar pictures from Goslar Fig 16: Siren & two GM from Goslar’s Jakob Kirche 31 Fig 15: Goslar Cathedral, second of 7 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 17: Goslar, Neuwerk Kirche Fig 18: Goslar, Neuwerk Kirche Fig 19: Goslar, Neuwerk Kirche Fig 20: Goslar, Neuwerk Kirche 32 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 21: first of 8 pictures from Magdeburg Cathedral 33 The Green Man of Cercles Fig 28: the last two pictures are from Magdeburg Cathedral Cloister (To be continued) Julianna Lees – Montagrier 2012 *see BIBLIOGRAPHY : ‘Formations, Déformations, la stylistique ornementale dans la sculpture Romane’ by Jorge Baltrusaitis, Flammarion, paperback, 1986 See also, Notes & Queries on “Green Men and Sirens at St Michel d’Aiguilhe” http://www.green-man-of-cercles.org/articles/green_men_and_sirens.pdf and “Are Harpies Sirens?” http://www.green-man-of-cercles.org/articles/are_harpies_sirens.pdf and my article, “From Roman to Romanesque” http://www.green-man-of-cercles.org/articles/from_roman_to_romanesque.pdf Acknowledgements/links : Professor Nurith Kenaan-Kedar, the title of whose doctoral thesis sparked off my interest in the Abbey of Saint-Chef, http://www.ville-langon.fr/eglise_st_pierre.htm, then click on “La Chapelle St-Agathe”. http://www.rochestercathedral.org to see more pictures of the sculptures at Rochester Cathedral http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/luc/tsg/index.htm for article on Derketo 34 The Green Man of Cercles Peter Hubert, who took the photographs of sculptures in the Saintonge and sent me the photo from San Prospero Suzanne Charlet, from whose web site - http://perso.orange.fr/fresques-romanes/ I have quoted extensively. NB – the photographs are by Christian Guyot, translation by Robin Lees Raymond Faure, for his photos of sculptures by Maestro Niccolo at Königslutter,Cathedral http://www.raymond-faure.com/Koenigslutter/koenigslutter-jagdfries-2.html Mathias Wenger, http://www.derhain.de/MittelalterProjekt/Atemgeburt/Atemgeburt.html who has the photos of Green Men at other German Cathedrals 35